Saving Seafood

  • Home
  • News
    • Alerts
    • Conservation & Environment
    • Council Actions
    • Economic Impact
    • Enforcement
    • International & Trade
    • Law
    • Management & Regulation
    • Regulations
    • Nutrition
    • Opinion
    • Other News
    • Safety
    • Science
    • State and Local
  • News by Region
    • New England
    • Mid-Atlantic
    • South Atlantic
    • Gulf of Mexico
    • Pacific
    • North Pacific
    • Western Pacific
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • Fishing Terms Glossary

NOAA encourages continued engagement on possible marine protected areas in New England

October 29, 2015 โ€” The following was released by NOAA:

We would like to thank those of you who have taken the time to engage with NOAA on possible protections for some of the most ecologically important areas in the Atlantic Ocean, including several deep sea canyons and seamounts. We are committed to evaluating opportunities to protect important marine resources and habitat, while limiting impacts to those people and businesses whose livelihoods depend on these waters.

We received a lot of valuable input at the town hall meeting and have received many helpful comments and questions submitted electronically.

Many of you have requested more details and additional opportunities for public comment, and in the coming months we intend to release additional information about the area under consideration and solicit feedback.

In the meantime, if you have more thoughts that you would like to share, please continue to send them to:  atlanticconservation@noaa.gov.

 

NEW BEDFORD STANDARD-TIMES: Fishermen win a small victory

October 8, 2015 โ€” Fishermen in the Northeast fisheries can celebrate a small victory in what President Obama didnโ€™t do on Monday.

The president addressed, by video, attendees of the Our Ocean 2015 conference in Valparaiso, Chile, and announced two new marine sanctuaries, neither one of them off the coast of new England.

Commercial fishing advocates had been fighting to counter the message of environmental groups that were running a full-scale campaign to put Cashes Ledge and the New England Canyons and Seamounts on the list, along with the two announced by the president in Maryland and Lake Michigan.

New England fishermen looked at the 6,000 square miles under consideration off the coast and saw the next strategic step toward pushing them off the ocean.

The valuable cold-water kelp forests of Cashes Ledge and the coral fields in the five canyons and four seamounts are worthy of protection, but they are already off limits to fishermen.

Fishing advocatesโ€™ concern of โ€œpolicy creepโ€ canโ€™t be dismissed as paranoia. The steady negative impact of regulation on the fishing industry is well-documented in reports on the health of the industry, and the use of various regulatory tools has left the industry reeling, wondering where the next threat will come from.

Read the full editorial from the New Bedford Standard-Times

At โ€œOur Oceansโ€ Conference in Chile, Obama announces the first new marine sanctuaries in 15 years

โ€œSeveral advocacy groups have been pressing the administration to declare two new national marine monuments off New Englandโ€™s coast: Cashes Ledge and the New England Canyons and Seamounts, which are home to a major kelp forest and network of deepwater corals, respectively. But some local fishing operators raised objections to the designations of the two areas in the run up to the global conference, and the president did not use his executive authority to put them off limits.โ€

The following is an excerpt from a Washington Post story, written by Chelsea Harvey with contributions from Juliet Eilperin: 

WASHINGTON (The Washington Post) October 5, 2015 โ€” In a video message to conference attendees, President Obama announced plans for two new marine sanctuaries, one off the coast of Maryland, and the other in Lake Michigan. Theyโ€™ll be the first new national marine sanctuaries designated by the federal government in the past 15 years.

One of these sanctuaries will be an 875-square mile section of Lake Michigan off the shore of Wisconsin, which is recognized for its collection of nearly 40 known shipwrecks, some of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The other sanctuary is a 14-square mile area of the Potomac River, which includes Marylandโ€™s Mallows Bay โ€“ an area known for its ecological significance, according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, and home to bald eagles, herons, beavers, river otters and numerous species of fish.

โ€ฆ

Several advocacy groups have been pressing the administration to declare two new national marine monuments off New Englandโ€™s coast: Cashes Ledge and the New England Canyons and Seamounts, which are home to a major kelp forest and network of deepwater corals, respectively. But some local fishing operators raised objections to the designations of the two areas in the run up to the global conference, and the president did not use his executive authority to put them off limits.

Marine national monuments differ from marine sanctuaries in that they can be established by presidential proclamation, whereas sanctuaries are designated by NOAA and require extensive public input โ€“ however, they can offer similar protections and human use restrictions over marine ecosystems.

The United States is also announcing several other plans aimed at protecting marine resources. In Chile for the conference, Secretary of State John F. Kerry announced the launch of Sea Scout, a global initiative targeting illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing by uniting world leaders, expanding technology and information-sharing and identifying illegal fishing hot spots. NOAA also has plans to expand the development of a technology known as the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite, which detects boats and may help alert nations to illegal fishing activities. The technology will be implemented in several nations in 2016, including Indonesia and the Philippines.

The Sea Scout initiative โ€œprovides a real opportunity to improve coordination and information sharing around the world as a way to combat illegal fishing,โ€ said Beth Lowell, senior campaign director for Oceana, in a statement to The Post. According to Lowell, the biggest challenges to combating illegal fishing are an untraceable global seafood supply chain and a lack of enforcement. And on these fronts, thereโ€™s still more to be done.

โ€œThe first step to effectively stop IUU fishing and seafood fraud is to require catch documentation for all seafood sold in the U.S.,โ€ Lowell said. โ€œWhile Oceana applauds the presidentโ€™s task force for taking great steps in the right direction, full-chain traceability is ultimately needed for all U.S. seafood to ensure that itโ€™s safe, legally caught and honestly labeled.โ€

Read the full story from the Washington Post

Read Secretary of State John Kerryโ€™s remarks here

 

Committee Pushes Back on Potential Marine Monument Designations

WASHINGTON โ€” September 30, 2015 โ€” Today, the Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans held an oversight hearing on the designations of Marine National Monuments, which are unilateral executive actions that usurp established regional fisheries management plans and impose significant economic and environmental impacts regionally and nationwide.

In particular, the hearing focused on the threat of Marine National Monument designations off Cape Cod in New England and the Aleutian Islands in Alaska under the Antiquities Act of 1906. President Obama has already expanded existing Marine National Monuments by more than 400,000 square miles, an area larger than the states of Texas and New Mexico combined.

Members and witnesses reviewed the utter lack of public input in prior unilateral monument designations and the adverse effects posed by potential future designations to Americaโ€™s fisheries and the thousands of jobs supported by the seafood industry.

Read the full story from RealEstateRama

Greensโ€™ hopes for quick win on New England monument fade

September 30, 2015 โ€” One month ago, environmental groups were strategizing over their latest bid: Get the Obama administration to create its first marine monument off New England.

They had talks with fishing groups, lawmakers and think tanks. At the end of August, they exchanged emails over their progress โ€” and in one, the president of the Conservation Law Foundation warned everyone to keep quiet about the possibility of a breakthrough at the upcoming Our Ocean Conference in Chile.

โ€œI hope no one is talking about Chile to the outside world,โ€ CLF Interim President Peter Shelley wrote. โ€œItโ€™s one of the few advantages we may have to know that it could happen sooner rather than later.โ€

The email showed up in response to a public records request that Saving Seafood filed with the office of Maine Gov. Paul LePageโ€™s. The advocacy group โ€” which represents fishermen opposed to the monument โ€” sent the emails to Greenwire yesterday, asserting that they confirm โ€œrumorsโ€ of an impending monument announcement from the White House.

Such an announcement would certainly make waves. The proposed monument is small and sees little activity today, but it is near prime fishing grounds. House Republicans have also added the proposal to their arsenal of criticism over the White Houseโ€™s use of the Antiquities Act (E&E Daily, Sept. 30).

Read the full story from the E&E Reporter

Aleutians monument fought as threat, derided as โ€˜straw manโ€™

September 29, 2015 โ€” Alaska Congressman Don Young and other Republicans on the House Natural Resources Committee this morning attacked the idea that President Obama might create a marine national monument around the Aleutian Islands, with unknown effects on the fishing industry. But the administration has given no sign itโ€™s considering the notion.

At a subcommittee hearing, Congressman Young said a marine national monument around the Aleutians would be terrible for the fishing industry.

โ€œIโ€™ve watched this over and over: The creeping cancer of the federal government overreaching,โ€ Young said. โ€œThe worst managers of any resource is the federal government. They do not manage. They preclude.โ€

The idea of protecting the waters of the Aleutian Chain came from environmentalist and retired UAA professor Rick Steiner. Last year, he proposed a massive marine sanctuary, covering all the federal waters of Bristol Bay and thousands of miles of the Bering Sea. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration killed the idea, saying it lacked local support. That seemed to be the end of it, except that Steiner launched an online petition telling President Obama he should create an Aleutian national monument instead. (Under the Antiquities Act, the president can just declare a monument on his own.) Steinerโ€™s plea to Obama, on thepetitionsite.com, has attracted more than 100,000 supporters, many from foreign countries. Steiner was not invited to the hearing to defend his idea.

Read the full story at Alaska Public Media

 

House Subcommittee Considers Atlantic Marine Monument

WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) โ€“ September 28, 2015 โ€“ The House Natural Resources Committeeโ€™s Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans will convene Tuesday, September 29, to consider โ€œThe Potential Implications of Pending Marine National Monument Designations.โ€ This hearing comes in the wake of a campaign from environmental organizations seeking to enact a marine national monument off the coast of New England via direct Executive order from President Obama. The campaign has been sharply criticized by industry members and prominent elected officials as overstepping transparent, public management processes and existing protections for the areas in questions. Included below is an excerpt from the Hearing Memo released by the House Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans.

Hearing Overview 

On Tuesday, September 29, 2015 at 10:00 a.m., in 1324 hearing room in the Longworth House Office Building, the Water, Power and Oceans Subcommittee will hold a one-panel oversight hearing on โ€œThe Potential Implications of Pending Marine National Monument Designations.โ€ 

Policy Overview 

  • The Antiquities Act of 1906 authorizes the President to reserve lands and waters of the United States as National Monuments. While National Monuments have been designated under sixteen Democratic and Republican Administrations, President Obama has expanded or created nineteen national monuments totaling over 260 million acres.
  • These designations are more than any other previous President. While so far he has not designated any Marine National Monuments, he has expanded existing ones by more than 403,000 total square miles โ€“ an area larger than the states of Texas and New Mexico combined. While lauded by some groups, the expansions have been criticized for cutting off commercial fishing access and undermining domestic seafood supplies and associated jobs and harming the environment.
  • A number of petitions are pending with the Obama Administration to designate areas off of Alaska and Cape Cod in New England. This hearing will primarily focus on the impacts of existing national marine monuments and these proposals. 

Read Saving Seafoodโ€™s analysis of this proposal here

Read the full Hearing Notice

Read the full Hearing Memorandum

Congressmen Jones & Young File Bill to Prevent Marine Monument Designations Without Congressional Consent

WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) โ€“ September 23, 2015 โ€“ The following was released by the Office of Congressman Walter Jones:

Congressman Walter B. Jones (R-North Carolina) and Congressman Don Young (R-Alaska) have cosponsored H.R. 330, the Marine Access and State Transparency (MAST) Act.  The bill would prevent President Barack Obama, or any future president, from unilaterally designating offshore areas as โ€œnational monumentsโ€ and restricting the publicโ€™s ability to fish there.  Instead, the bill would require a president to get the approval of Congress and the legislature of each state within 100 nautical miles of the monument before any โ€œmonumentโ€ designation could take effect.

The bill comes in response to increasing speculation that President Obama may follow the example of his predecessor George W. Bush and unilaterally designate large swaths of coastal America as โ€œnational monuments.โ€  In 2006, President Bush short circuited the established process of public consultation and input and unilaterally designated 84 million acres off the coast of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands as a national monument. The new monument, which is larger than 46 of Americaโ€™s 50 states, was then closed to fishing.    

โ€œPresidents from both parties have abused their monument designation authority for far too long,โ€ said Congressman Jones.  โ€œNo president should be allowed to just lock up millions of acres of fishing grounds by fiat, with no public input whatsoever.  Frankly, itโ€™s un-American, and it must be stopped.  I am proud to be the first member of Congress to join my friend Don Young in fighting for this legislation, and I urge the rest of my colleagues to get behind it.โ€ 

For additional information, please contact Maria Jeffrey in Congressman Jonesโ€™ office at (202) 225-3415 or at maria.jeffrey@mail.house.gov.

Read the release from Congressman Jones online

House Natural Resources Committee Convenes Hearing to consider โ€œThe Potential Implications of Pending Marine National Monument Designationsโ€

WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) โ€” September 22, 2015 โ€” The House Natural Resources Committeeโ€™s Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans will convene next Tuesday, September 29, to consider โ€œThe Potential Implications of Pending Marine National Monument Designations.โ€ This hearing comes in the wake of a major campaign from environmental organizations seeking to enact a marine national monument off the coast of New England via direct Executive order from President Obama. While strongly supported by many environmentalists, the campaign has been sharply criticized by industry members and prominent elected officials as overstepping transparent, public management processes and existing protections for the areas in questions.

The hearing will begin at 10am EST in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

Read Saving Seafoodโ€™s analysis of this proposal here

Read the meeting notice from the House Natural Resources Committee

Read more about the hearing

Massachusetts: Gloucester joins fight against marine monument plan

September 18, 2015 โ€” The City of Gloucester has joined fishing stakeholders opposing conservationist efforts to permanently restrict fishing access to Cashes Ledge and an area south of Georges Bank that includes three deep canyons and four seamounts to create the Atlantic seaboardโ€™s first marine national monument.

In her letter read into the record Tuesday night at a NOAA-hosted town meeting in Providence to discuss the issue, Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken stated the cityโ€™s objections to designate the deep sea canyons and seamounts โ€” and Cashes Ledge โ€” as a national monument.

โ€œWe have learned over the years to take a balanced perspective on issues, to make sure to have researched all the facts, and to include the public in our decisions,โ€ Romeo Theken wrote. โ€œIt is from this perspective that I write in opposition to the Conservation Law Foundation-organized proposal for a national monument.โ€

Romeo Theken, as many other fishing stakeholders, decried the initiative by the CLF, the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pew Charitable Trusts โ€” which are imploring President Obama to use the federal Antiquities Act to unilaterally create the national monument โ€”- as a blatant end-run around the existing fisheries management system and wholly unnecessary given the protections already in place.

โ€œThis CLF request undermines the democratic process established for fisheries management and replaces science with pure politics,โ€ Romeo Theken wrote.

Romeo Thekenโ€™s letter parallels much of the opposition generated by the national monument proposal for an area that is about 100 miles southeast of Cape Cod and is home to some of the true wonders of the ocean, including seamounts and canyons that respectively rise and plunge thousands of feet from the ocean floor.

It also objected to a similar protective designation for Cashes Ledge, which sits about 80 miles east of Cape Ann.

Read the full story at Gloucester Daily Times

  • ยซ Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page ยป

Recent Headlines

  • Data now coming straight from the deck
  • ALASKA: Alaskaโ€™s 2025 salmon forecast more than doubles last year
  • Seafood sales at US retail maintain momentum, soar in April
  • MSC OCEAN STEWARDSHIP FUND AWARDS GRANT TO CWPA
  • Steen seeing hesitation from US buyers of processing machinery amid tariffs, cost uncertainties
  • Fishing fleets and deep sea miners converge in the Pacific
  • Industry Petition to Reopen Northern Edge Scallop Access Named as Top-Tier Deregulation Priority
  • Fishery lawsuit merging coastal states could reel in Trump

Most Popular Topics

Alaska Aquaculture ASMFC Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission BOEM California China Climate change Coronavirus COVID-19 Donald Trump groundfish Gulf of Maine Gulf of Mexico Hawaii Illegal fishing IUU fishing Lobster Maine Massachusetts Mid-Atlantic National Marine Fisheries Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NEFMC New Bedford New England New England Fishery Management Council New Jersey New York NMFS NOAA NOAA Fisheries North Atlantic right whales North Carolina North Pacific offshore energy Offshore wind Pacific right whales Salmon South Atlantic Western Pacific Whales wind energy Wind Farms

Daily Updates & Alerts

Enter your email address to receive daily updates and alerts:
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Tweets by @savingseafood

Copyright ยฉ 2025 Saving Seafood ยท WordPress Web Design by Jessee Productions

Notifications