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Environmental groups file federal suit seeking green sea turtle habitat protections

January 8, 2020 โ€” Three conservation groups filed a lawsuit in federal court on Wednesday, 8 January, against the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump, claiming it has not done enough to protect green sea turtle habitats across the country from a variety of threats.

The Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), the Turtle Island Restoration Network, and Sea Turtle Oversight Protection claim NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined nearly four years ago that the turtles still required protection under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) because of threats from climate change and rising sea levels.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

U.S. senators propose grant program to help restore Chesapeake Bay habitats

September 30, 2019 โ€” Marylandโ€™s U.S. senators and colleagues from across the Chesapeake Bay watershed introduced a bill Friday to create a federal grant program for projects focused on restoring the bayโ€™s fish and wildlife habitats.

The Chesapeake WILD Act aims to replicate a similar program that provides $5 million annually for such projects in the Delaware River basin. The legislation would create a funding stream for work to restore wetlands, improve stream water quality, and plant trees and other vegetation.

If the grant program is approved, Congress would have to allocate money for it in the appropriations process for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is part of the Department of the Interior.

Read the full story at The Baltimore Sun

NOAA admin defends budget in House oversight hearing

May 24, 2019 โ€” Thereโ€™s likely going to be no more withering nor efficient criticism of the Trump administrationโ€™s coastal economic and environmental policy goals than U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman launched into at the outset of a U.S. House subcommittee meeting Tuesday.

The House Subcommittee on Water, Oceans and Wildlife met to discuss the administrationโ€™s fiscal year 2020 budgets for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The California Democrat said the Trump administrationโ€™s proposed budget shows the president โ€œdoes not value oceans, wildlife or the communities that depend on healthy ecosystems.โ€

Huffman cited a $250 million cut to USFWS and a nearly $1 billion cut to NOAA. He said some Republican members of the subcommittee may find these cuts wise, though he did not.

โ€œBut reducing funding for science, wildlife and communities working to increase resiliency in the face of climate change is not wise,โ€ Huffman said. โ€œItโ€™s just passing the buck to our kids and grandkids, who will pay the price for these short-sighted, irresponsible decisions down the road.

โ€œFrom climate change denial to a national debt thatโ€™s ballooning thanks to huge tax cuts to billionaires, to budgets like this that abrogate any notion of stewardship for future generations, young people today could be forgiven for thinking that the generation currently in power is reckless and hedonistic.โ€

U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., indeed did say the proposed cuts in the budget were not only the proper way to go, but should go further in consolidating perceived overlaps between NOAA and USFWS and cutting away more spending programs.

Read the full story at The Brunswick News

Ambitious new plan to save Atlantic salmon has big price tag

February 15, 2019 โ€” The federal government outlined an ambitious, potentially costly new plan to restore Atlantic salmon in the United States, where rivers teemed with the fish before dams, pollution and overfishing decimated their populations.

The Atlantic salmon has declined in the U.S. to the point where the last remaining wild populations of in the U.S. exist only in a handful of rivers in Maine. But the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are offering a new recovery plan to bring back those fish, which are listed under the Endangered Species Act.

The plan would take decades to fully implement, and it focuses on strategies such as removals of dams, installations of fish passages and increasing the number of salmon that survive in the ocean. It states that the estimated cost is about $24 million per year, not including money federal departments already spend on salmon recovery work.

How that money would materialize at this point is unclear. But the plan gives the species a roadmap to recovery, said Peter Lamothe, program manager for the Maine fish and wildlife complex for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

โ€œIt gives all of the partners involved in this what to shoot for โ€” what we collectively need to achieve to recover the species,โ€ Lamothe said. โ€œIt gives us a path forward.โ€

Atlantic salmon are readily available to seafood consumers because of extensive aquaculture, but the wild fish have been declining in the Gulf of Maine since the 19th century.

Back then, 100,000 adult salmon returned annually to Maineโ€™s Penobscot River, which remains the most important river for the species in America.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the New Bedford Standard-Times

Federal shutdown effects on February NPFMC Portland meeting

January 11, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council:

IS THE COUNCIL IMPACTED BY THE SHUTDOWN? The Council staff is at work and conducting business as usual. However, most of our federal partners at the National Marine Fisheries Service (Alaska Region and the Alaska Fisheries Science Center), the U.S. Coast Guard, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are on furlough during the shutdown.

WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS? Since many NMFS scientists and fishery management specialists are key contributors to the Councilโ€™s analyses, Plan Teams and Committees, the Council is rescheduling or modifying the agendas for several meetings where NMFS representatives were expected to provide pivotal presentations, reports, and/or analyses.

WHAT ABOUT THE COUNCILโ€™S FEBRUARY 2019 MEETING? The Councilโ€™s February meeting in Portland, OR at the Benson Hotel will be shortened to occur from February 4-10 and will still include meetings of the SSC and Advisory Panel. If the partial government shutdown remains in place, the Council will conduct as much business as possible given the federal furlough.

The following agenda items have been postponed to a future meeting: C2 Observer Program Fees Initial Review and FMAC report, and D4 Economic Data Reports Discussion Paper. Additionally, the following items may be postponed as well: B4 State Department Report on Central Arctic Ocean fishing agreement; D6 Economic SAFE Report; D7 Marine Mammal Conservation Status Report. Additionally, the presentation on Saltonstall-Kennedy grant results may also be postponed. The updated agenda and additional information can be found at npfmc.org.

The Council may not be able to take final action on any agenda items during this meeting unless the meeting has been announced in the Federal Register at least 14 days before the Council takes a final action. The Council could make a โ€˜preliminary final determinationโ€™ on these issues, and take final action at a later meeting. With respect to the Norton Sound Red King Crab Harvest Specifications, which requires timely action to open the fishery, the Council may hold a teleconference meeting as soon as the Federal Register notification requirements can be met, allow additional public comments, and take final action on that issue.

UPCOMING PLAN TEAM AND COMMITTEE MEETINGS:

Further information and updates on all Council meetings can be found at meetings.npfmc.org.

Crab Plan Team: The Councilโ€™s Crab Plan Team will meet January 23 โ€“ 25 in Nome, Alaska. The meeting has been shortened to start on Wednesday, as some agenda items have been postponed until May as NMFS staff may not be available.

Halibut ABM Stakeholder Committee: The Committee will meet on February 4th at the Benson Hotel in Portland, OR. There are no changes to the previously announced agenda.

Fishery Monitoring Advisory Committee: This Committee meeting has been postponed, and will likely be rescheduled to occur during the April 2019 Council meeting in Anchorage, AK. The Committee was primarily scheduled to review the observer fee analysis (which has been withdrawn from the agenda), and other topics.

Ecosystem Committee: The Committee will meet on February 5th at the Benson Hotel in Portland, OR. The agenda will likely be modified to remove the presentation on marine mammal conservation status, unless NMFS staff are available to provide this report.

At this point, no further changes have yet been proposed to Council Plan Team and Committee meetings that are scheduled for mid-February and beyond.

Senate allocates $11 million to prevent spread of Asian Carp

August 14, 2018 โ€” An Interior Appropriations bill passed in the U.S. Senate aims to help scientists curtail the spread of invasive Asian Carp, particularly into the Great Lakes.

Sens. Charles E. Schumer and Kirsten E. Gillibrand, D-N.Y., announced Tuesday the bill contains $11 million for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serviceโ€™s ongoing effort to halt Asian carp movement along the Mississippi and Ohio river basins and prevent it from entering the Great Lakes.

โ€œThe invasive and destructive Asian carp are no friend of the Great Lakes, and we need to do all we can to keep them out and protect our wildlife and Great Lakes,โ€ Sen. Schumer said in a statement.

Fish and Wildlife Service scientists have spent decades researching and deploying various tools to impede Asian carp from traveling into new waters and outcompeting native fish.

Todd J. Turner, Midwest assistant regional director of fisheries for the service, said people imported Asian carp to eat the algae in their catfish ponds, but flooding and accidental releases, sent the non-native fish into the Mississippi River system. It has since spread to other river systems. Some populations have reached as close as 50 to 100 miles from Lake Michigan, although Mr. Turner said that hasnโ€™t changed much in the recent decade.

As adept filter feeders, Mr. Turner said Asian carp can outcompete juvenile native fish species like bass and catfish for food like microplankton and zoo plankton. The silver carp, which has sensitive hearing, also threatens boaters because it jumps in the air when startled by loud noises and can strike someone in the head.

Read the full story at the Watertown Daily Times

Senators question NOAA Fisheries-FWS merger proposal in hearing

July 24, 2018 โ€” Members of the U.S. Senate got their first chance to look at the latest attempt to merge NOAA Fisheries with the Fish and Wildlife Service at a meeting on Thursday, 19 July.

Members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee met to discuss the Trump administrationโ€™s plan to revamp agencies within the Department of Interior, which is where the proposed merged agency would be located. Two Democratic committee members spoke out against the proposal during the hearing.

A merger of the two agencies requires approval of the U.S. Congress.

U.S. Sen Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), the ranking minority member on the committee, said a merged FWS-NOAA Fisheries could trigger laying off thousands of workers and create โ€œmore bureaucratic mismanagementโ€ of fisheries.

โ€œMoving NOAA Fisheries from (the Department of) Commerce to the Department of Interior ignores the agencyโ€™s responsibility of managing multi-billion-dollar commercial fisheries,โ€ said Cantwell, who added that she believes what fisheries need is โ€œscience and funding.โ€

Susan Combs, a senior advisor in Interior Department, said in her opening remarks that Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has reviewed the agencyโ€™s operations and sought to modernize it in order to serve the country well for the 21st century.

โ€œThe secretaryโ€™s vision is to establish science-based unified regional boundaries, where priority decision making is made at the local level with informed centralized coordination,โ€ Combs said.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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