June 27, 2013 — Contrary to constitutional intent, the fisheries are regulated by the bureaucracy with little real input from the legislative and judicial branches.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act is scheduled to be reauthorized this fall. Rumor has it that a material reauthorization is unlikely because anticipated changes are anticipated to be controversial.
Failing to materially reauthorize the act is a serious lapse in public policy. The current version of the act does not protect the fishing industry and the public from governmental excess because, as a practical matter, the current form of the act does not ensure the operation of the checks and balances among the legislative, judicial and executive branches.
Contrary to constitutional intent, the fisheries are regulated by the bureaucracy with little real input from the legislative and judicial branches.
This dysfunction among the branches of government is bad for the fishing industry and the public. Right now, of 20 stocks of groundfish, 11 stocks are claimed to be overfished while 10 stocks are claimed to be subject to overfishing. At the same time roughly 50,000 tons of fish that could be caught without overfishing are not caught. The underfishing of 50,000 tons of fish is a waste of $150 million at the dock, or $600 million by the time the fish leave the economy. Last September, the secretary of Commerce formally declared the fishery a disaster. Despite this declaration, there has been no governmental reaction or policy to mitigate the disaster. And the beat goes on. The attorney general of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has just filed a complaint arguing that NOAA is managing fisheries with little cognizance of the National Standards of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
It would be misguided to place the blame for all of this on NOAA. We need to look at the root causes of the problem, which involve the dynamics of the interactions among the three branches of government.
Key parts of the Magnuson-Stevens legislation are equivocal or ambiguous. Ambiguous and equivocal language enables the bureaucracy to construct its own interpretation of the law. These interpretations are issued as "guidelines." The guidelines are specified as not having the force and effect of law, yet as a practical matter the courts seem to think that the guidelines have the force and effect of law. The guidelines often change what seems to be the original intent of Congress.
Read the full opinion piece in the New Bedford Standard-Times
On June 27, Dr. Rothschild appeared on New Bedford radio station WBSM to discuss his Standard-Times op-ed.
Listen to part 1 of the interview
Listen to part 2 of the interview