January 31, 2019 — Some of the cost of the US federal government’s partial 35-day shutdown must now be borne by New England’s commercial fish and shellfish harvesters waiting for their permits to be renewed, but earlier this week Michael Pentony described how his staff at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was trying to mitigate the pain.
In a briefing provided to the New England Regional Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) at their meeting in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on Tuesday, Pentony, the director of NOAA’s Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office (GARFO), said his team was prioritizing the backlog of new fishing permit requests as well as renewal requests that didn’t get attention. (Undercurrent News has been provided a recording of the comments.)
Fishing vessel permits begin to expire on March 1 for several species, including red crab, squid and butterfish, and scallop permits expire on April 1, he noted. Permits for several other species expire on May 1.
The backlog of permit renewals “was the thing that really kept me up at night as the shutdown dragged on and on with no end in sight for a while”, Pentony told the NEFMC.