December 3, 2015 — NOAA Fisheries again has extended the timetable for shifting the cost of at-sea monitoring to the groundfish industry, saying one of its monitoring contractors will have sufficient funds to continue paying for the program into 2016.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced on Wednesday that one of its three at-sea monitoring contractors has enough money remaining to fund at-sea monitoring for an estimated 250 to 300 sea days into 2016 and that the other two contractors will sub-contract to provide the necessary number of monitors to ensure full coverage for all groundfish vessels until the final allotment of funds runs out.
A sea day is defined as a calendar day which any monitor spends at sea on a covered fishing trip.
Teri Frady, a spokeswoman for NOAA, said approximately $200,000 remains for at-sea monitoring and the agency estimates that money will last until sometime early in 2016 — possibly around the end of February.
Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times