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North Carolina shrimpers say net of new rules for trawlers will destroy industry

February 17, 2017 โ€” WILMINGTON, N.C. โ€” The state Marine Fisheries Commission voted Thursday to begin drafting rules that would limit trawling for shrimp in North Carolinaโ€™s inland coastal waters, a move that many on the coast say could destroy the shrimping industry.

The decision came after months of wrangling between commercial and recreational fishermen, with the latter group arguing that trawlers are scooping up millions of young fish before theyโ€™re old enough to spawn, effectively killing off fish stocks in the region.

The North Carolina Wildlife Federation petitioned the state โ€“ the only one on the East Coast that allows shrimp trawling in its sounds and estuaries โ€“ to reduce the size of trawler nets, limit how long nets could be pulled in the water, permit shrimping only three days per week and eliminate night-time shrimping.

โ€œNorth Carolina has some of the most lenient shrimp trawling rules on the East and the Gulf Coast,โ€ said David Knight, a policy consultant for the Wildlife Federation.

Thousands of people signed petitions against the proposal, and commercial fishermen packed Marine Fisheries Commission meetings in recent months to make their stance known. Hundreds left in disgust Thursday after the commission overrode the recommendations of its advisory committees and accepted the Wildlife Federationโ€™s petition.

โ€œWhat just happened today is appalling,โ€ said Brent Fulcher, who owns Beaufort Inlet Seafood in Beaufort. โ€œThe state process is broken.โ€

Read the full story WRAL

NORTH CAROLINA: Petitionโ€™s aim: Gear bans or resource protection?

November 28, 2016 โ€” MOREHEAD CITY, N.C.โ€“ A conservation organizationโ€™s request that the state adopt stricter rules for shrimping and recreational spot and croaker isnโ€™t sitting well with a local seafood industry advocacy group.

Jerry Schill, president of the N.C. Fisheries Association, a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the state fishing industry, says the association thinks the petition for rulemaking from the N.C. Wildlife Federation, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting the stateโ€™s natural resources, will lead to gear bans that could put shrimping in North Carolina in jeopardy.

However, David Knight, NCWF policy consultant, said the petition is meant to protect fish and their habitat and actually assist fishing communities by doing so.

The Southern Environmental Law Center presented a petition for rulemaking, on behalf of the NCWF, to the N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission Nov. 17 in Kitty Hawk at the commissionโ€™s regular meeting.

The petition requests several changes to shrimping regulations, special secondary nursery area (SSNA) designation for all coastal fishing waters not already designated nursery areas and additional regulations for recreational spot and croaker fishing. The petition is under review for completeness by the MFC chairman, Sammy Corbett, and the commissionโ€™s legal counsel, Phillip Reynolds of the N.C. Department of Justice, after which it will go out for public comment.

Patricia Smith, N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries public information officer, said Mr. Corbett and Mr. Reynolds are still reviewing the petition as of Tuesday. According to a press release from the DMF, the state agency which enforces the regulations created by the MFC, the commission has 120 days from the date of the petitionโ€™s submission, Nov. 2, to take action granting or denying the request for rulemaking.

Read the full story at the Carteret County News-Times

NORTH CAROLINA: Anglers angling for tougher rules on shrimp trawlers

November 18, 2016 โ€” KITTY HAWK, N.C. โ€” On a sunny fall day when commercial fishermen would normally be on the water hoping for a big catch, many were crammed into a dimly lit hotel ballroom in Kitty Hawk on Thursday trying to head off proposed rules that could limit future catches.

The state Marine Fisheries Commission is considering a petition from the North Carolina Wildlife Federation to adopt regulations for shrimp trawlers operating in coastal sounds that would reduce the size of their nets, limit how long nets could be pulled in the water, permit shrimping only three days per week and eliminate night-time shrimping.

The goal of the changes, according to Wildlife Federation officials, is to protect fish nurseries.

โ€œWe have found doing the research โ€“ looking at the science, looking at the data and doing the analysis โ€“ that we are losing too many fish to shrimp trawling,โ€ David Knight, a policy consultant for the Wildlife Federation, told the commission.

โ€œItโ€™s kind of crazy that it comes up now because we just passed, last year, the shrimp plan,โ€ commission Chairman Sammy Corbett said.

One of the proposals would cut the length of the head rope attached to the top of a trawler net from 220 feet to 90 feet.

Read the full story at WRAL

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