May 3, 2012 – Missing from much of the debate regarding President Obama’s executive order for a National Ocean Policy (NOP) is the fact that legislative attempts to create this new bureaucracy were regularly defeated by the House going back to the 108th Congress. No companion bill was every debated before the Senate or Senate committee, and the House version of this overreaching national policy never made it to the floor.
Mind you, this was not partisan gridlock which stymied this big government policy directive, but a coalition of Democrats and Republicans alike who would not support movement of this flawed legislation. In member debate before the bipartisan House Natural Resources Committee, the original NOP bill (known as “Oceans 21”) was called “bad legislation” being pushed by “an overzealous group of people” opposed to fishing. Committee members criticized the legislation for "creating a new bureaucracy and potentially costing taxpayers more money,” while one of the longest tenured Democrats on the committee even expressed concern for “unintended consequences for fisheries management” should the bill move forward.
In frequent testimony before the committee, coastal fishermen questioned the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) recommendations that the NOP be enacted through the Executive Branch rather than by proper legislative process. Considering the broad implications and the hundreds of stakeholder groups which would be affected by the NOP, the most appropriate course of action should’ve been through the Legislative Branch where individual stakeholders would’ve had opportunity to discuss the virtues and flaws of the NOP in a more deliberate, transparent process.
Enacting laws through Executive order sets a dangerous precedence, particularly when it threatens to minimize or even supersede the role of existing law, which in this case is federal fisheries law enacted in 1976 (Magnuson-Stevens Act). The NOP itself provides excessive influence to CEQ and works to further exclude much of the decision-making process at the regional fisheries management level, thereby creating a bias towards a handful of appointed, potentially connected industry and conservation groups from the Washington DC area who are removed from the day-to-day needs and concerns of coastal constituents.
Capt. John McMurray’s recent op-ed piece provides a perfect example of the exclusionary principles of the NOP as it stands. In his editorial, Mr. McMurray explains how the NOP, “with proper stakeholder input, would actually protect habitat and access and result in the common sense management of marine resources.” The problem of course is that the NOP is yet another law that requires politically connected appointees to government councils and commissions. The Delphi Technique of securing buy-in from the regulated community when enacting policy is grossly irresponsible, particularly when actual stakeholders are denied a seat at the table at the onset.
Read the full story at The Hill.