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 Administrationโs (NOAAโs) top decision maker for the northeastern part of the US.
Itโs 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 thatโs been in the works for 10 years and would address essential fish habitat as well as permanent and seasonal closed areas, he believes. But thatโs 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.
โIโm retiring,โ he reiterated when pressed. โIโm retiring.โ
Neither will NOAA, which advertised Bullardโs job for a month starting on Aug. 7, say how many candidates itโs now considering to fill his post or suggest when a successor might be named. Itโs the agencyโs policy to โnot 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.