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Pentony steps into NOAAโ€™s top Atlantic post with much underway

January 15, 2018 โ€” Michael Pentony, John Bullardโ€™s successor as administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationโ€™s (NOAA) Greater Atlantic region, is a โ€œstraight shooter,โ€ who works toward โ€œyes,โ€ and has a lot of experience on fisheries management issues, sources tell Undercurrent News.

NOAA ended months of speculation on Thursday when it announced that Pentony, a long-time NOAA staffer and also a one-time member of the New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) staff, was its pick to lead all fishery policy making in the 100,000 square mile long region that stretches from the state of Maine to Cape Hatteras, in North Carolina, and the Great Lakes.

โ€œMichaelโ€™s deep experience in every aspect of sustainable fisheries management, both commercial and recreational, positions him perfectly for this job. He is going to hit the ground running,โ€ assured Chris Oliver, director of NOAA Fisheries, in a statement announcing the decision.

Bullard announced his retirement back in July, ending a nearly six-year rein in the regionโ€™s top spot, which comes with an office in Gloucester, Massachusetts, and beginning the agencyโ€™s search for a replacement. He said at the time that he had a long list of chores to complete before he could finish, most of which he took on during a recent flurry of activity at the agency.

However, Bullard left quite a few big matters for Pentony to finish up.

Pentony, who is set to assume his new role on January 22, enters his new job at the end of an eventful period, including the prosecution and sentencing of the owner of New Englandโ€™s largest fishing operation, Carlos Rafael.

Read the full story at Undercurrent News

 

MAFMC: South Atlantic Fishery Management Council Seeks Input on Proposed Changes for Atlantic Cobia Management

January 11, 2018 โ€” The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council:

Members of the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council are soliciting public input on proposed management changes for Atlantic cobia as they consider revising the current management system. Public hearings will be held via webinar with public listening stations beginning January 22, 2018. Information on the proposed changes is now available from the Councilโ€™s website at: http://safmc.net/safmc-meetings/public-hearings-scoping-meetings/. Written comments are also being solicited using the online comment form available from the website page.

Atlantic cobia are managed in federal waters along the Atlantic coast from Georgia through New York in cooperation with the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council; two voting seats are provided to the Mid-Atlantic Council on the South Atlantic Councilโ€™s Mackerel Cobia Committee. This arrangement provides an opportunity to include the views of constituents from Virginia northwards. Cobia in federal waters off the east coast of Florida are considered part of the Gulf of Mexico migratory stock.  The management boundary for the two stocks was modified following a 2013 stock assessment and annual catch limits for each stock were set.  NOAA Fisheries determined the recreational catch limit for Atlantic cobia was exceeded in 2015, leading to a shortened season in 2016. Cobia harvested in both state and federal waters count toward the annual catch limit.  Subsequent overages occurred during 2016 and the recreational fishery was closed in federal waters on January 24, 2017.

In order to provide for effective management and fair and equitable access to the Atlantic cobia fishery without reducing protection to the stock, the Council is considering a range of alternatives for managing Atlantic cobia, from complementary management with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) to removal of Atlantic cobia from the federal management unit. The ASMFC recently approved an Interstate Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic Cobia that will be implemented in April 2018.  Should the Council choose to remove Atlantic cobia from the current federal management unit, the ASMFC Interstate Plan would be applied to both state and federal waters, allowing for additional management flexibility.

Public Hearings for Atlantic Cobia Management

(Amendment 31 to the Coastal Migratory Pelagics Fishery Management Plan)

Public hearings will be conducted via webinar with listening stations as noted below. Attendance at the listening stations is encouraged but not required. During the public hearings, Council staff will present an overview of the amendment and will be available to answer questions via webinar. Area Council members or state agency representatives will be present at each of the listening stations. Members of the public will have an opportunity to go on record via webinar or at the listening stations to record their comments for consideration by the Council.

January 22, 2018 Webinar โ€“ begins at 6:00 PM

Listening Stations:

  1. Port Royal Sound Maritime Center: 310 Okatie Hwy, Okatie, SC 29909
  2. North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheriesโ€™ Central District Office: 5285 Highway 70 West, Morehead City, NC 28557
  3. Georgia Department of Natural Resources Coastal Division: One Conservation Way,Brunswick, GA 31523

January 23, 2018 Webinar โ€“ begins at 6:00 PM

Listening Station:

  1. Hatteras Community Center; 57689 NC Highway12,Hatteras, NC 27943

January 24, 2018 Webinar โ€“ begins at 6:00 PM

Listening Stations:

  1. Haddrellโ€™s Point Tackle: 885 Ben Sawyer Blvd, Mt Pleasant, SC 29464
  2. Virginia Marine Resources Commission (The Maritime Building); 2500 Washington Ave., 4th Floor, Newport News, VA23607 *Note: The VA location is a state-organized listening station and was arranged to provide the public in Virginia the opportunity to attend and provide comments in-person.

Registration for each webinar is required. Registration information, along with public hearing documents, video presentations, and other materials is now available from the Councilโ€™s website at: http://safmc.net/safmc-meetings/public-hearings-scoping-meetings/. An online public comment form for written comments is also available. Comments must be received by 5 p.m. February 9, 2018 to be included in the briefing book materials for the Councilโ€™s March 5-9, 2018 meeting in Jekyll Island, GA.

The Council is also asking for public input on the timing of measures proposed in Amendment 31. A Stock Identification Workshop for Cobia is scheduled to begin in April 2018 as part of a benchmark stock assessment Atlantic cobia.

Learn more about the MAFMC by visiting their site here.

 

MAFMC February 2017 Council Meeting Agendaโ€‹

January 17, 2017 โ€” The following is a schedule for the February meeting of the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Managment Council (MAFMC). It was released by the MAFMC:

Tuesday, February 14th

1:00 p.m. โ€“ 2:30 p.m. River Herring/Shad Committee Meeting

  • Discuss criteria to assess progress in river herring/shad conservation

2:30 p.m. Council Convenes

2:30 p.m. โ€“ 4:00 p.m. Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Meeting as a Committee of the Whole

  • Review and approve public hearing document for Squid Amendment

4:00 p.m. โ€“ 4:30 p.m. Law Enforcement Report

4:30 p.m. โ€“ 5:30 p.m. Presentation on National Marine Sanctuary Nomination Process, Paul Ticco โ€“  NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries

Wednesday, February 15th

9:00 a.m. Meeting with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commissionโ€™s Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Boards

9:00 a.m. โ€“ 10:00 a.m. 62nd Northeast Regional Stock Assessment Workshop (62nd SAW), Jim Weinberg, NMFS, NEFSC

  • Overview of black sea bass benchmark stock assessment findings and peer review panelist findings

10:00 a.m. โ€“ 11:45 a.m. Black Sea Bass 2017-2019 Specifications

  • Overview and staff recommendation
  • SSC recommendation
  • Review Monitoring Committee and Advisory Panel recommendations
  • Adopt recommendations for 2017-2019

11:45 a.m. โ€“ 12:30 p.m. Black Sea Bass Research Update, Brad Stevens โ€“ UMES

12:30 p.m. โ€“ 1:30 p.m. LUNCH

1:30 p.m. โ€“ 3:30 p.m. Black Sea Bass Recreational Specifications

  • Review Monitoring Committee and Advisory Panel recommendations
  • Adopt recommendations for 2017 management measures
  • Review Recreational Working Group recommendations and regional/state proposals (possible Board action)

3:30 p.m. โ€“ 5:00 p.m. Black Sea Bass Commercial AM Framework

  • Review background, issues, and draft alternatives

5:00 p.m. โ€“ 5:30 p.m. Summer Flounder Amendment

  • Update on progress and timeline

Thursday, February 16th

9:00 a.m. Council Convenes

9:00 a.m. โ€“ 1:00 p.m. Business Session

  • Organization Reports
    • NMFS Greater Atlantic Regional Office
    • NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center
    • NOAA Office of General Counsel
    • Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
  • Liaison Reports
    • New England Council
    • South Atlantic Council
    • Regional Planning Body
  • Executive Directorโ€™s Report, Chris Moore
  • Science Report, Rich Seagraves
  • Committee Reports
  • Continuing and New Business

See the full schedule at the MAFMC

NOAA Fisheries Announces Public Hearing and Comment Period for Amendment

September 26, 2016 โ€” HYANNIS โ€“ The public comment period is now open for a new amendment that allows for industry-funded monitoring over the past several years.

The Mid-Atlantic and New England Fishery Management Councils have worked on the amendment, which includes alternatives that would modify all the fishery management plans managed by the councils to allow for future industry-funded monitoring programs.

The public will have a chance to comment on the various amendment alternatives, including cost responsibilities, processes, administrative requirements and priorities.

The public meetings begin on October 4 in Gloucester and continue until November 1.

Read the full story at CapeCod.com

Mid-Atlantic Council Approves Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries Management (EAFM) Guidance Document

August 11, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council:

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. โ€“ Today the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council unanimously approved a guidance document to facilitate the transition to an ecosystem approach to fisheries management (EAFM) in the Mid-Atlantic. The EAFM Guidance Document is designed to serve as an umbrella document that will enable the Council to coordinate ecosystem considerations across fishery management plans (FMPs).

The Council has been considering mechanisms to introduce ecosystem considerations into the fishery management process since the late-1990s. After a review of the various approaches used around the U.S., and extensive input from fisheries stakeholders through its visioning project, the Council decided in 2011 to pursue a transitional approach which would introduce ecosystem considerations into fishery management actions in a step-wise, evolutionary fashion. This approach is intended to allow the Council to meet its current requirements for the management of individual stocks while moving towards an approach that takes into account interactions at multiple dimensions of the environment and ecosystem.

โ€œThe EAFM Guidance Document responds to broad public interest in incorporating ecosystem considerations in the management of marine fisheries and will be a critical tool for the Council as it transitions from single-species management to a more comprehensive, ecosystem-based approach,โ€ said Council Chairman Rick Robins. โ€œOne of the most important aspects of this approach is that it will allow for the evolution of our EAFM policy at a rate commensurate with the availability of the science to support it.โ€

The Councilโ€™s EAFM approach is organized around four major ecosystem-related issues: forage species, habitat, climate change and variability, and interactions. Development of the document was informed by a series of four workshops which brought together scientists, managers and stakeholders to discuss each issue and associated best management practices.

Northeast Trawl Advisory Panel Working Group โ€“ Aug. 2 meeting

July 29, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

The Northeast Trawl Advisory Panel (AP) Working Group is scheduled to meet in Boston to discuss using commercial fishing vessels to supplement current stock assessment surveys conducted by the Northeast Fisheries Science Center.

Date:        Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Time:        9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Location:   Hilton Garden Inn, Logan Airport, 100 Boardman Street, Boston, MA  02128

WHAT IS THE WORKING GROUP:  The working group was created on June 1 by the Northeast Trawl Advisory Panel specifically to address how best to deploy additional survey capacity using chartered commercial fishing vessels funded by the science center.  The science center provides the working group with meeting summaries and reports, and the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council provides staff support.

WHATโ€™S ON THE AGENDA:  The working group will receive a short update on upcoming witch flounder work; review the draft โ€œterms of referenceโ€ for augmenting current survey efforts; conduct in-depth discussions on the full range of options; and draft recommendations for consideration by the broader Northeast Trawl Advisory Panel.  Final AP recommendations will be presented to the Mid-Atlantic and New England Councils.

August 2016 Mid Atlantic Fishery Management Council Meeting Agendaโ€‹

July 20, 2016 โ€” The Mid Atlantic Fishery Managment Council released the agenda for their August 2016 Council meeting today. The meeting will take place from August 8-August 11 in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

See the agenda for the meeting here

Request for Proposals: Tilefish Surveying

July 7, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Managment Council:

The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council is seeking a contractor to develop a โ€œproof-of-conceptโ€ survey for blueline and golden tilefish.  The work would be used to implement a relative abundance survey (from Cape Hatteras through the northernmost extent of their range) and should involve both design and pilot implementation components, as well as consideration of coordination with any other relevant surveys.

Interested parties should provide a proposal including methodology, timeline, costs, qualifications, and three references by August 8, 2016. Please see the Request for Proposals linked below for complete details and submission instructions.

See the full request for proposals here

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