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Coronavirus NJ: Fishing coalition seeks $4B in federal aid to cover lost restaurant sales

March 26, 2020 โ€” Commercial fishing industry members say theyโ€™re trying to stay afloat while the demand for fish dwindles as restaurants are reduced to take-out only amidst the coronavirus health crisis.

Saving Seafood, a national coalition of seafood harvesters that includes New Jersey members, is now turning to the federal government for $4 billion in financial help.

โ€œWe have to manage our expectations right now. This is a national issue and itโ€™s not going to be solved in a day or two,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico, executive director of the Garden State Seafood Association, a commercial trades group thatโ€™s also a part of the Saving Seafood national coalition.

The coalition reports that more than two-thirds of the $102.2 billion that consumers paid for U.S. fishery products in 2017 was spent at food service establishments, as opposed to home consumption.

Read the full story at the Asbury Park Press

Saving Seafood Coalition Members Thank Rep. Jared Huffman for Fisheries Listening Sessions

January 8, 2020 โ€” The following was released by the National Coalition for Fishing Communities:

Members of Saving Seafoodโ€™s National Coalition for Fishing Communities (NCFC) would like to thank Congressman Jared Huffman (D-CA) and the members of the House Natural Resources Committee for their work in 2019 hosting their series of listening sessions on the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA). NCFC members from across the country have participated in the sessions, bringing the concerns of the fishing industry directly into the MSA reauthorization process. NCFC looks forward to continue working with the Committee on MSA in 2020.

The listening sessions, which began in October with two days of hearings in Northern California and continued with additional hearings in Seattle and Baltimore, are gathering input on the state of U.S. fisheries from fishermen and other stakeholders. At each stop, fishermen have shared with the committee how current fisheries management is workingโ€”and how it can be reformed.

  • In Arcata, California, Wayne Heikkila, Executive Director of the Western Fishboat Owners Association (WFOA) discussed funding and science issues, as well as the need to distinguish between fish stocks that are actually experiencing overfishing and those that are depleted due to other causes. WFOA is a non-profit association representing albacore troll-vessel owners and supporting businesses in California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii.
  • In San Francisco, Mike Conroy, founder of West Coast Fisheries Consultants, discussed the need for better science to help fill data gaps, and how increased collaboration with the industry could help address this shortcoming.
  • In Seattle, Lori Steele, Executive Director of the West Coast Seafood Processors Association (WCSPA) told the committee about the need for additional flexibility in the Magnuson-Stevens Act, while still honoring the Actโ€™s conservation goals. The hearing also discussed how to meet the long-term needs of fishing communities, especially in the face of climate change. Headquartered in Portland, Oregon, WCSPA members are shore-based processors of fish and shellfish in Washington, Oregon and California.
  • In Baltimore, Greg DiDomenico, Executive Director of the Garden State Seafood Association (GSSA) informed the committee on key successes protecting forage species and adopting protections for critical coral habitats in the Mid-Atlantic. He raised concerns over the impacts of overly precautionary approach to the MSA has led to underfishing of fish stocks. Specifically, he noted that risk-adverse management has led to unpredictable quotas, stemming from fluctuating estimates of scientific uncertainty. GSSA represents fishing industry members who sustainably harvest seafood from New Jerseyโ€™s inshore & offshore waters.

โ€œWe have been testifying since 2009 on the unintended consequences of the 2006 reauthorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico. โ€œAs part of these hearings weโ€™ve provided the Chairman with 10 years worth of written testimony so that we can finally fix these issues in the next update to MSA.โ€

NEW JERSEY: Legislature Succumbs to Humane Societyโ€™s Misinformation Campaign Against Sustainable Shark Fishing

November 25, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Garden State Seafood Association:

The Garden State Seafood Association (GSSA) is disappointed with the passage of Assembly Bill A4845/S2905 today, which would prohibit the possession, sale, or trade of legally harvested shark fins in New Jersey.

The U.S. Humane Society and environmental organizations have been pursuing this anti- conservation legislation for many years. The bill prohibits the sale and trade of shark fins under the guise of stopping โ€œshark finning.โ€ The commercial sector and U.S. fisheries passed a law nearly 20 years ago making shark finning and the sale of those fins illegal across the country and in all U.S. territorial waters.

GSSA is certain that existing federal laws prevent any sale of illegal shark fins in New Jersey.

โ€œAll this legislation does is to penalize legitimate, hard working fishermen of the state,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico, Executive Director of GSSA. โ€œInstead of acknowledging the leadership of our commercial industry, which operates a globally-recognized sustainable shark fishery, those supporting this legislation will penalize New Jersey fishermen, forcing them to discard a natural resource for no purpose.โ€

โ€œThis legislation rewards illegal poachers in underdeveloped and less-regulated nations by removing sustainable harvested fins from the world market,โ€ said Scot Mackey, Legislative Agent for GSSA. โ€œIt will only increase the value of the fins these poachers will continue to harvest, while preventing our well-managed and sustainable shark fisheries from utilizing the whole animal.โ€

NEW JERSEY: Safety Trainings for Commercial Fishermen Coming to Cape May

October 3, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Garden State Seafood Association & the Fishing Partnership Support Services:

Two free safety trainings for commercial fishermen will be offered soon at a convenient Cape May location.

Safety and Survival Training will be on Thursday, Oct. 17, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., at Two Mile Landing, 1 Fish Dock Rd., Wildwood Crest. Drill Conductor Training will be held at the same location on the next day, Friday, Oct. 18, 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. A team of certified marine safety instructors will lead both programs. Lunch will be provided on both days.

The trainings are made possible by a federal grant to Fishing Partnership Support Services, a Massachusetts-based non-profit dedicated to the health, safety and economic security of commercial fishermen and their family members. The organization has been conducting safety trainings in the northeast for nearly a decade.

Safety and Survival Training will cover:

  • Man-overboard procedures
  • Onboard firefighting
  • Emergency communications
  • Flood and pump operation
  • Survival suits
  • Life raft deployment and boarding
  • Basic first aid

Drill Conductor Training prepares and certifies fishermen to conduct emergency drills at sea, as federal regulations require monthly drills on commercial fishing boats operating more than three nautical miles beyond the U.S. coast. Emergency situations addressed in this training include: man overboard, fire, damage control, and abandon ship. There will be an emergency procedures class in the morning and practice drills aboard a docked vessel in the afternoon.

As a pre-requisite for Drill Conductor Training, fishermen need to have taken the Safety and Survival Training within the previous 12 months.

โ€œEvery emergency at sea is a potential threat to life and limb,โ€ said Ed Dennehy, director of safety training for Fishing Partnership Support Services. โ€œThrough hands-on training, we demonstrate and instill the best ways to deal with all kinds of emergencies. This knowledge can save a fishermanโ€™s life or enable a fisherman to save the life of a fellow crew member.โ€

Walk-ins are welcome on the day of each program, but pre-registration is strongly recommended. Fishermen may register online by going to the Upcoming Programs and Services section of the FPSS website, www.fishingpartnership.org or by calling Morgan Eldredge at 508-237-9402.

Providing support to the trainings are the U.S. Coast Guard and the Massachusetts Fishermenโ€™s Partnership, an organization representing all gear and geographic sectors of the Massachusetts fishing industry.

Congressman Jeff Van Drew Fights for Jersey Fishermen, Introduces Bipartisan Magnuson-Stevens Act Reauthorization

July 11, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Office of Congressman Jeff Van Drew (D-NJ):

Today, Congressman Jeff Van Drew (D-NJ) and Congressman Don Young (R-AK) introduced the H.R. 3697, the Strengthening Fishing Communities and Increasing Flexibility in Fisheries Management Act. This bipartisan legislation reauthorizes the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery and Conservation Management Act โ€“ landmark fisheries management and conservation legislation first written by Congressman Young in 1975. The Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA) was last reauthorized in 2006.

Congressman Van Drew said, โ€œFisheries have long been the lifeblood of the South Jersey economy and culture. Our marine resources support the largest commercial and recreational fisheries in the Atlantic Coast, contributing more than $2.5 billion very year to our stateโ€™s economy. The Strengthening Fishing Communities and Increasing Flexibility in Fisheries Management Act ensures that we have healthy fisheries, keep anglers in the water and keep fishermen fishing.โ€

โ€œAlaskaโ€™s seafood industry is one of the primary drivers of our state economy, and for over forty years, the Magnuson-Stevens Act has allowed our fishermen, processors, and coastal communities to thrive,โ€ said Congressman Young. โ€œIn 1976, I was proud to fight for our Nationโ€™s fishermen alongside my dear friend Rep. Gerry Studds (D-MA) as we first drafted this bipartisan legislation, and in the years since, I have been proud to continue to partner with my Democratic colleagues to keep our fisheries healthy. As the nature of our ecosystem and fishing industry changes, we must ensure our laws are updated to keep pace in an evolving world. I am pleased to work across the aisle with Congressman Jeff Van Drew (D-NJ), industry leaders, and stakeholders in Alaska and throughout the country to update this important law. Future generations must have access to our oceanโ€™s renewable resources. Simply put, sustainability is not a partisan issue โ€“ I have always valued having bipartisan support for this critical legislation and have incorporated input from diverse groups and interests into this bill. Our reauthorization takes important steps to protect one of our most important renewable resources, and ensures that generations of fishermen to come can earn a living by putting sustainable seafood on the tables of families across the country. I will be working diligently to ensure that our bipartisan MSA reauthorization crosses the finish line and is ultimately signed into law.โ€

According to Wayne Reichle, President of Lundโ€™s Fisheries in Cape May โ€œthe NJ commercial fishing industry is grateful for the leadership and bipartisan efforts of Congressman Van Drew and for his commitment to productive fisheries and a prosperous industry achieved through quality science and sound management.โ€

โ€œThe Garden State Seafood Association has been advocating for MSA reform since 2009. We sincerely hope that Congressman VanDrew will receive the support he deserves from all of the national recreational and commercial fishing groups,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico, Executive Director of the Garden State Seafood Association.

โ€œMr. Young and Mr. Van Drew are well versed on the current Magnuson-Stevens bill and how it penalizes fisherman while stocks are healthy. Thanks to both of these great fishery issue leaders for taking on the challenge of pragmatic Magnuson reform,โ€ said Jim Donofrio, Executive Director of the Recreational Fishing Alliance.

This legislation tailorโ€™s federal fishery management actions to give Regional Fishery Management Councils the proper tools and flexibility to manage their fisheries effectively. The bill specifically:

โ€ข Affords flexibility by allowing Councils to base fishery stock rebuilding timeframes on science rather than the one-size-fits-all approach;
โ€ข Increases transparency in science and management by allowing the public to play a greater role in the development of science and Fishery Management Plans;
โ€ข Gives stakeholders a voice in the management process and requires the Secretary of Commerce to develop a plan for implementing cooperative research with fishermen and outside groups; and
โ€ข Seeks to further improve the science and data on which Councils base their management, including key provisions relating to the collection of data from the recreational saltwater fishing industry.

This bill passed the House of Representatives in the 115th Congress with bipartisan support.

Read the release at Congressman Van Drewโ€™s website

Read about Congressman Jared Huffmanโ€™s Magnuson-Stevens listening tour here

NEW JERSEY: Anglers Conservation Network Wrongly Attacks NOAA for Determination on Alewife and Blueback Herring

June 24, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Garden State Seafood Association:

On Tuesday, June 18, 2019, NOAA announced they found that no populations of alewife or blueback herring (collectively referred to as โ€œriver herringโ€), or any of the four alewife distinct population segments (DPS) and three blueback DPSs along the east coast of the United States were either in danger of extinction nor likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future. Therefore, they determined that listing any of those species under the Endangered Species Act as either threatened or endangered is not warranted at this time.

Almost immediately, the Anglers Conservation Network responded on Facebook, asking the hypothetical question, โ€œWhat do you do when the federal agency in charge of sustainability fails to not only recognize, name and correctly manage a vital forage fish? [sic].โ€

They accused NOAA of failing โ€œto do its dutyโ€ and of letting โ€œcommercial fishing lobbyists carry the day.โ€ They also asked their followers and readers to โ€œplease learn more about what the current administration is doing to America.โ€

This determination had nothing to do with any appointees of the Trump Administration. For the status review of alewife and blueback herring, NOAA formed a team composed of career scientists from NOAA Fisheries, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife, the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, and the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources. The team members have scientific expertise in river herring biology/ecology and/or expertise in population ecology or fisheries management. Their report was reviewed by three independent external experts and by NOAA Fisheries staff.

The team members are:

  • Robert Adams โ€“ New York Department of Environmental Conservation
  • Michael Bailey โ€“ USFWS, Central New England Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office
  • Ruth Haas-Castro โ€“ NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Science Center
  • Kiersten Curti โ€“ NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Science Center
  • Ben Gahagan โ€“ Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries
  • Ed Hale โ€“ Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife
  • Tara Trinko Lake โ€“ NOAA Fisheries, Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office
  • Bill Post โ€“ South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

Not a single team member is an appointee of the Trump Administration. The team members were not contacted by, nor did they interact with, โ€œcommercial fishing lobbyistsโ€ during their work on the determination. Their work was rigorous, with the final report totaling 167 pages.

The Anglers Conservation Network has a long history of opposing legal, well-managed U.S. forage fisheries. In a case argued by Roger M. Fleming of EarthJustice that failed on appeal in 2016, the Anglerโ€™s Conservation Network sued then Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, stating that NOAA unlawfully neglected to manage stocks of river herring and shad in the Atlantic Ocean from New York to North Carolina. The court found that NOAA rationally considered the status of river herring stocks, the fact that they are managed by the Atlantic coastal states where these fish breed, and greatest threats to their populations, including dams and barriers.

NOAA has created a program of bycatch caps in the Atlantic herring and mackerel fisheries to help conserve the stock. Meanwhile, the federal government continues to work with its partners in the states to improve habitat for these stocks. Far from โ€œfail[ing] to do its duty,โ€ as Anglers Conservation Network claims, NOAA has been proactive in helping to restore these important stocks.

Read the full release here

New Jersey shark fin ban bill: Assembly to vote today on measure to protect sharks

March 25, 2019 โ€” The New Jersey Assembly will vote on a bill today that will prohibit the selling, trading, distribution or possession of any shark fin that has been separated from a shark prior to its lawful landing.

The bill passed the Assembly Appropriations Committee last Monday after already having passed the Senate. If it clears the assembly, it will go to Gov. Murphy to sign into law.

Assemblyman John Armato D-Northfield, one of the billโ€™s primary sponsor told the Asbury Park Press theyโ€™re trying to โ€œget out in front ofโ€ shark finning.

Fishing industry members here say the bill will hurt local fishermen not involved in the illegal trade and punishes the wrong people.

โ€œItโ€™s a clear attempt to discourage the industry from participating in sustainable shark fisheries. The industry is monitored, regulated, observed, managed under rigorous scrutiny and this legislation could care less,โ€ Greg DiDomenico, president of the Garden State Seafood Association, said.

Read the full story at the Asbury Park Press

Reintroduced Shark Trade Bill Promotes Successful U.S. Conservation Policies at Global Level

Bill incentivizes nations to follow U.S. example of successful management

January 31, 2019 โ€” WASHINGTON โ€” The following was released by the Sustainable Shark Alliance:

A bipartisan bill introduced in the U.S. House advances global shark conservation by ensuring that all shark and ray products imported into the United States meet the same high ethical and sustainability standards required of American fishermen. The bill has broad support from conservation groups, zoos, aquariums and the fishing industry.  A companion bill is expected soon in the Senate; Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) introduced a similar bill in the last Congress.

The Sustainable Shark Fisheries and Trade Act of 2019 (SSFTA), H.R. 788, introduced by Rep. Daniel Webster (R-FL), and co-sponsored by Reps. Ted Lieu (D-CA), Bill Posey (R-FL), Josรฉ Serrano (D-NY), among others, creates a transparent certification program for countries seeking to import shark products into the United States, modeled on similar laws that protect sea turtles and marine mammals across the globe. Similar legislation is expected to be introduced in the Senate.

Nations wishing to take advantage of the U.S. market for shark and ray products must prove they have an effective prohibition on the reprehensible and wasteful practice of shark finning, and have shark and ray management policies comparable to those under the Magnuson-Stevens Act.

Unlike legislation (H.R. 737) from Rep. Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan (D-NMI), which bans all trade of shark fins in the United States, the Sustainable Shark Fisheries and Trade Act creates incentives for improving shark conservation globally. The SSFTA punishes bad actors in other parts of the world while allowing responsible fishermen in the U.S. and elsewhere to realize the maximum value of their carefully managed and scientifically limited annual catch.

โ€œFishing is a long-standing profession and treasured American pastime, and particularly important in Florida,โ€ said Rep. Webster. โ€œOur responsibility is to balance the needs of the industry with conservation. This bill recognizes the sacrifices American fishermen have made to rebuild and sustain our shark populations and calls on others to meet these same high standards.โ€

โ€œWe thank the Congressmen for introducing the Sustainable Shark Fisheries and Trade Act,โ€ said Tad Mask, regional director of the Southeastern Fisheries Association in Tallahassee, Florida. โ€œThe bill promotes shark conservation and the successful model of American shark management, without threatening law-abiding U.S. fishermen.โ€

โ€œThe idea of a fin ban comes as a first step in environmental groups ultimate goal of ending all shark fishing,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico, director of the Garden State Seafood Association. โ€œThe same groups pushing Rep. Sablanโ€™s bill are also calling for an end to shark fishing tournaments.  Supporting sensible shark conservation measures, like Rep. Websterโ€™s, should be a common goal of the commercial and recreational fishing communities.โ€

U.S. shark fisheries are among the best managed in the world. In a paper published last year, Dr. David Shiffman, a Liber Ero Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Simon Fraser University, and Dr. Robert Hueter, Director of the Center for Shark Research at Mote Marine Laboratory, wrote that the U.S. โ€œhas some of the most sustainable shark fisheries on Earthโ€ and called the U.S. โ€œa model of successful management.โ€

Shark finning, the cruel practice of removing a sharkโ€™s fins at sea and discarding the rest of the shark, has been banned in the United States with industry support since the 1990s. Currently, when a shark is landed, the fins are left naturally attached.

The Sustainable Shark Alliance has long argued for the importance of obtaining the maximum value by fully utilizing the limited catches U.S. fishermen are allowed. A U.S. ban on the sale of fins deprives coastal communities of much needed income, while mandating waste of a valuable and culturally important resource.

โ€œThe answer to the problem of shark finning is not โ€˜reverse shark finning,โ€™ by destroying the shark fins that are legally harvested,โ€ said the Allianceโ€™s counsel, Shaun Gehan. โ€œIt is to stop shark overfishing and waste of much needed shark protein in all the worldโ€™s shark fisheries. The SSFTA moves us in that direction.โ€

Prior versions of the Sustainable Shark Fisheries and Trade Act have been supported by commercial fishing industry groups, including but not limited to the Garden State Seafood Association, Southeastern Fisheries Association, North Carolina Fisheries Association, Directed Sustainable Fisheries, and Louisiana Shrimp Association; environmental groups, such as the Wildlife Conservation Society; and zoo and aquarium facilities, such as Mote Marine Laboratory, Palm Beach Zoo, SeaWorld, Zoo Miami Foundation and the Florida Aquarium. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has also written in support of approach.

About the Sustainable Shark Alliance
The Sustainable Shark Alliance (SSA) is a coalition of shark fishermen and seafood dealers that advocates for sustainable U.S. shark fisheries and supports well-managed and healthy shark populations. The SSA stands behind U.S. shark fisheries as global leaders in successful shark management and conservation.

National Science Foundation grant to continue work on key fishery management issues

January 24, 2019 โ€” A cooperative research center that brings together seafood industry leaders and academic experts has received a grant from the National Science Foundation to continue its work on a number of issues that impact sustainable fisheries.

The Science Center for Marine Fisheries (SCeMFiS) will use the federal money to study four issues, including how climate change affects fisheries and how to settle differences between offshore energy producers and the fishing community.

Other research the center will perform as part of the grant will focus on management practices that keep catch limits below levels that reduce jobs and inhibit economic growth. According to a press release from the center, the key focus will be to reduce uncertainty for the commercial industry.

According to the NSF, the grant is worth USD 100,000 (EUR 88,021). Work is expected to start on 1 March and last for five years.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Science Center for Marine Fisheries Continues Work with New National Science Foundation Grant

January 23, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Science Center for Marine Fisheries:

Following the completion of its initial 5-year National Science Foundation (NSF) grant, the Science Center for Marine Fisheries (SCeMFiS) has been awarded a new Phase 2 grant by the NSF to continue its work. SCeMFiS will use the new grant to further its track record of quality, collaborative research with its fishing industry and academic partners.

The grant is part of NSFโ€™s Industry/University Cooperative Research Center (IUCRC) program, which was developed to initiate long-term partnerships among industry, academia, and government. SCeMFiS is the only Phase 2 IUCRC program dedicated exclusively to fisheries and marine science research.

โ€œOur new Phase 2 grant will allow SCeMFiS researchers to continue our collaborative work with the fishing industry,โ€ said Center Director Dr. Eric Powell, of the University of Southern Mississippi, one of the academic members of SCeMFiS. โ€œThe Phase 2 grant will enable SCeMFiS to continue to fund the groundbreaking research necessary to maintain healthy fish stocks and healthy fisheries at a time when reliance on the best available science is increasingly critical.โ€

As it moves into Phase 2, SCeMFiS will focus on reducing scientific uncertainty; the effects of climate change on fish stocks and fishing communities; resolving issues between fishing and offshore energy interests; and developing sound ecosystem-based fisheries management.

โ€œOur priorities for Phase 2 reflect the biggest challenges in the future of the fishing industry,โ€ said Center Site Director Dr. Roger Mann, of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, another SCeMFiS academic institution. โ€œTo meet these challenges, the industry and fisheries managers will need the kind of innovative research that SCeMFiS has regularly produced over the last 5 years.โ€

In its first 5 years, SCeMFiS has done groundbreaking research on finfish and shellfish. Among other projects, the Center produced the first age-frequency distributions for ocean quahog, one of the longest-lived species in the ocean. SCeMFiS scientists conducted the first benthic survey on important ocean habitat east of Nantucket, and mapped the shifting range of surfclams, documenting how climate change is beginning to affect the species.

SCeMFiS has also designed a pelagic survey for Atlantic menhaden and provided recommendations to improve port sampling for the species, carried out the only scientific work to date on Atlantic chub mackerel, and carried out an economic analysis for longfin squid.

All of these projects were reviewed, approved, and funded by the industry members on our Industry Advisory Board, who rely on sound science for the health of their fisheries and businesses.

โ€œFisheries management is only as good as the science itโ€™s based on,โ€ said Greg DiDomenico, Executive Director of the Garden State Seafood Association and a member of SCeMFiSโ€™ Industry Advisory Board. โ€œThatโ€™s why itโ€™s so important for the fishing industry to maintain its partnership with SCeMFiS. We need to promote the best available science.โ€

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