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Retiring NOAA exec has impossible to-do list: whale deaths, Rafael decision, more

September 29, 2017 โ€” GLOUCESTER, Mass. โ€” John Bullard knows he has a daunting list of tasks to complete before he walks away, in about three months, from his position as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s (NOAAโ€™s) top decision maker for the northeastern part of the US.

Itโ€™s urgent for NOAA to determine why so many right whales have recently died, take action to protect scallop populations in the northern Gulf of Maine and advance the Omnibus Habitat Amendment, a six-volume document thatโ€™s been in the works for 10 years and would address essential fish habitat as well as permanent and seasonal closed areas, he believes. But thatโ€™s just a few of the jobs he told Undercurrent News he wants to see to completion before leaving.

The announcement, made in July, that Bullard will retire as the administrator of NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ Greater Atlantic Region on Jan. 5 puts a cap on a recent five-year stint at the agency, which he told Undercurrent during a break at the New England Fishery Management Council meeting, is three years longer than he said he told his wife he would stay in the job. He said he has not yet decided what he will spend his time on after that.

โ€œIโ€™m retiring,โ€ he reiterated when pressed. โ€œIโ€™m retiring.โ€

Neither will NOAA, which advertised Bullardโ€™s job for a month starting on Aug. 7, say how many candidates itโ€™s now considering to fill his post or suggest when a successor might be named. Itโ€™s the agencyโ€™s policy to โ€œnot comment on ongoing hiring actions,โ€ a spokesperson said.

Whoever is awarded the position โ€“ one of five regional leadership positions for NOAA โ€” will have the daunting job of working with the fishery councils to manage 44 fish stocks, including two in New England (scallops and lobster) that are worth more than $500 million per year each, according to the agency.

Read the full story at Undercurrent News

Reminder to Scallop Fishermen: Closed Area II Access Area Closes August 15

August 10, 2017 โ€” The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

The Scallop Closed Area II Access Area will close at 12:01 am on August 15 and will remain closed through November 15. All vessels must be out of the area prior to the time of the closure.

Any unharvested Closed Area II pounds can be harvested once the area reopens on November 16.

For more information, see our new story map that describes the scallop fishery regulations for 2017, or see our large map of the scallop management areas (also below).

Frulla & Hawkins of FSF: Doing the Math on Closed Areas

August 17, 2015 โ€” The following is an opinion piece written by David Frulla and Anne Hawkins, of the Fisheries Survival Fund, which appears in the September 2015 issue of National Fisherman magazine:

Old closed areas, like old attitudes, die hard. After 10 yearsโ€™ work, the New England Fishery Management Council took final votes in June on Omnibus Habitat Amendment 2, addressing essential fish habitat protection in the Gulf of Maine, on Georges Bank and in the Great South Channel.

One last major vote involved Georges Bank. Discussions had proceeded for months about how to work within the existing alternatives to refine a carefully drawn area that closed three areas for habitat protection. The councilโ€™s choice for Georges came down to two options: doing nothing or a new alternative based on more than a decade of new scientific data and analyses. Ultimately, the council chose progress.

The argument to do nothing was driven by a false choice that has gained attention as rhetoric began to outpace the facts contained in council decision documents. For two-plus years, environmental NGOs have made the false argument that more than 7,000 square miles of allegedly pristine habitat on Georges Bank will be .thrown open to mobile bottomยญtending gear, to be replaced by only 2,000 square miles of habitat protections. Lost in the blizzard of misinformation is the fact that the habitat amendment subjects more area on Georges Bank to habitat management than โ€œno action.โ€

And now, a warning: Weโ€™ll mire you in some details. Sound bites are easy. Itโ€™s harder to explain change involving complex analyses and choices.

The history: In December 1994, NMFS closed 6,711 square miles of Georges Bank, via the emergency enactment of Closed Areas I and II. The closureโ€™s focus was reducing fishing mortality on cod, yellowtail and haddock to aid rebuilding. Then, in 2006, Scallop Amendment 10 and Groundfish Amendment 13 designated 1,965 square miles within the two closed areas as closures to protect habitat. The council needed to close areas to protect habitat on Georges and it decided to work within the existing groundfish closures rather than closing additional areas. The areas designated as habitat closures have remained permanently closed, while much of the remaining 4,746 square miles (6,711 minus 1, 965) have been used as scallop and/ or groundfish special access areas, among other things.

The changes: In contrast to the 1,965 square miles on Georges Bank specifically managed for habitat now under โ€œno action,โ€ the habitat amendment would specifically manage approximately 2,470 square miles for habitat: about two-thirds of the existing Habitat Area of Particular Concern in Closed Area II, plus some area outside it; a new Georges Shoals area, to the west, currently open to fishing; and a dedicated habitat research area within existing Closed Area I. Almost all these 2,470 square miles will be closed. Less than 10 percent would be open to scallop access area fishing, and about half that to limited groundfishing.

In addition, the habitat amendment closed for habitat approximately 1, 700 additional square miles in the Great South Channel. Most is within a new habitat of concern for juvenile Georges Bank cod. This would replace a somewhat larger closure within the Nantucket Lightship Closed Area. Virtually none of the existing area habitat closure is habitat of concern for juvenile Georges Bank cod, or anything.

When viewed across the entire Georges Bank cod stock area (Georges Bank and the Great South Channel), the habitat amendment would include roughly 4, 170 square miles for habitat management (totally closing more than 90 percent of it) versus 4,050 square miles for โ€œno action,โ€ and it includes far more habitat of concern for juvenile Georges Bank cod than โ€œno action.โ€ The habitat amendment also closes more areas that peer-reviewed analyses identify as vulnerable gravel and cobble substrate.

What of the rest of the โ€œlostโ€ Georges Bank and Great South Channel groundยญfish closures? The remaining areas inยญclude: current access areas, such as the scallop and groundfish special access areas in southern Closed Area II and central Closed Area I, and portions of the closed areas that the habitat amendmentโ€™s peer-reviewed metrics show have little to no habitat value whatsoever. The amendยญment does not, moreover, open these areas without restriction, but rather imยญposes approximately 5,500 square miles of seasonal spawning closures. Protecting spawning is the remaining conservation consideration now that quotas control groundfish fishing mortality.

The result: More, not less. Altogether, approximately 7,764 square miles of the Georges Bank cod stock area on Georges and in the Great South Channel will eiยญther be managed as-a habitat area or seaยญsonal spawning closure. Moreover, the council designed these areas using peer-ยญreviewed models, rather than 2006โ€™s dead reckoning approach limited to existing groundfish closed areas. In total, across Georges Bank, the Great South Channel and the Gulf of Maine, the habitat amendment would close more area for habitat than is currently closed. As the late Paul Harvey might say, โ€˜.โ€™Thatโ€™s the rest of the story.โ€

View a PDF of the opinion piece from National Fisherman magazine here

Georges Bank vote sparks more debate between fishermen, environmentalists

June 21, 2015 โ€” NEW BEDFORD, Mass. โ€” The world of Northeast American fisheries may have felt a seismic shift in the wake of the three-day meeting last week of the New England Fisheries Management Council. But it is much too soon for either side in the endless fishery management debate to claim a victory.

Major non-profit environmental organizations are lamenting the decision by the council to recommend reopening 5,000 square miles of Georges Bank, an area known as the Northern Edge, to fishing after a closure of two decades.

Peter Shelley, senior attorney for the Conservation Law Foundation, charged that the council ignored years of scientific data and analysis and โ€œcaved to industry pressuresโ€ regarding Georges Bank. (The council did approve four other areas of habitat protection.)

โ€œThe council hammered the final nail into the coffin of what could have been a landmark victory for ocean habitats protection in New England,โ€ Shelley wrote on his organizationโ€™s web site.

Dr. Sarah Smith, a member of the Fisheries Solutions Center at the Environmental Defense Fund, wrote The Standard-Times in an e-mail, โ€œWe are disappointed that the council chose short-term economic gains for a few over the long-term health of the fishery, particularly struggling stocks such as Georges Bank cod and yellowtail flounder.

โ€œThe Councilโ€™s preferred alternative overlooks our best scientific information, and perhaps most troubling, would virtually eliminate protection for sensitive areas that serve as critical habitats for juvenile cod and other groundfish.โ€

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

 

 

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