March 6, 2017 — The U.S. Senate took time out from its annual handball tournament last week and confirmed Wilbur Ross as the new commerce secretary, adding yet another billionaire to the Trump cabinet that has more of them than Danny Ainge has draft picks.
Ross is estimated to be worth about $2.9 billion, which means Commerce’s NOAA Fisheries might want to bypass Congress and put the arm on the new boss the next time its runs out of cash for at-sea monitoring.
Still, fishing stakeholders had to take some measure of comfort from his intention to make America first in the world in seafood by the reversing the trend of massive annual seafood imports.
“Given the enormity of our coastlines, given the enormity of our fresh water, I would like to figure out how we can become much more self-sufficient in fishing and perhaps even a net importer,” Ross told the senators during his confirmation hearing in January.
Bully for him. But how will he do it? Will his crusade translate into fewer regulations? Higher fishing quotas? Declaring war on seafood competitors?
The Politico website had its own suggestion:
“One action Ross could take to curb the amount of seafood the U.S. imports each year is to follow through on the Seafood Monitoring Program which the Commerce Department’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration established during the waning days of the Obama administration,” it wrote in an analysis of the Ross confirmation. “That regulation, supported by environmental groups like Oceana, is aimed at reducing billions of dollars in illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing each year by creating a traceability program to track imported seafood from point of harvest to point of entry in the U.S.”