PRESS RELEASE: 5/17/06
Bipartisan fisheries
management bill
passes Resources
Committee
WASHINGTON
- The House Resources Committee
today approved H.R. 5018, the
American Fisheries
Management and Marine Life Enhancement Act,
sponsored by Chairman Richard Pombo (R-Calif.), Rep.
Barney Frank (D-Mass.) and Rep. Don Young
(R-Alaska), on a vote of 26 to 15.
H.R. 5018 reauthorizes
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act, initially passed in 1976, which
oversees fisheries resources and fishing activities
in Federal waters and established the eight Regional
Fishery Management Councils responsible for the
conservation and management of U.S. Fishery
resources.
"After six years, 17
hearings and testimony from 143 witnesses, I am
happy to finally pass a Magnuson-Stevens
reauthorization bill out of the Resources
Committee,"
Chairman Richard Pombo said. "I
very much appreciate the effort from my colleagues
to work together to create this compromise
legislation. What we have is a solid bill to take to
the House floor and, eventually, to conference with
the Senate."
H.R. 5018 represents
compromise legislation from all involved parties,
including ideas from earlier bills,
recommendations of the U.S. Commission on Ocean
Policy and many suggestions received by the
Resources Committee during
public hearings. It is modeled after the
management framework of the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council, which is widely cited as the
best in the nation.
In fact, at a recent hearing, the North Pacific
Fishery's
executive director stated that H.R. 5018
"...contains clear direct language regarding the
establishment of annual catch limits, including
provisions regarding acceptable biological catch
levels as recommended by the SSC. This reflects a
model that has been used in the North Pacific for
three decades, and I believe represents a
significant strengthening of the conservation
aspects of the [A]ct."
"I am pleased that the
Resources Committee took this important step today
toward passage of a balanced bill to reauthorize the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, essentially as sponsored by
Chairman Pombo and myself,"
Rep. Frank said.
"I look forward to continuing our work leading to a
new law that will provide the framework for an
environmentally and economically sound fishing
industry."
"I appreciate the work
that Chairman Pombo has put into this bipartisan
legislation. While the bill does not go as far as I
would like in a few areas, I understand that the
Chairman has worked hard to create compromise
legislation,"
Rep. Young
said. "As the representative of the state where
approximately 50 percent of all the seafood in the
United States is landed, and where the North Pacific
Council has been touted as the best of the eight
regional fishery management councils, I appreciate
the need to maintain the Council system and create
an atmosphere where decisions can be made by those
who are most affected by the management
decisions. The North Pacific has no overfished
fisheries and this is testament to the hard work for
the fishery managers and the use of science in
management decisions. This legislation encourages
this type of management for all fisheries across the
U.S."
More on H.R. 5018:
National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA)
Most NEPA requirements
are already part of the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA).
H.R. 5018 adds the remaining two provisions to MSA
that the Resources Committee heard in hearings were
not currently in the law. The Secretary of Commerce
would then make the determination if the MSA's
provisions are equivalent to NEPA's provisions.
If the Secretary of
Commerce concludes that the MSA's provisions are
equivalent to NEPA's provision, the Secretary would
have the discretion to decide if NEPA's provisions
have been met once a Council has complied with MSA.
The
executive director of the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council also agrees that NEPA should be
streamlined with MSA, saying at a recent hearing
that "[t]he NEPA process does not and never will fit
the dynamic nature of fisheries management."
Rebuilding provisions
H.R. 5018 maintains
the 10-year deadline to rebuild fish stocks, but
allows the Secretary of Commerce to extend it beyond
10 years in certain cases only:
-
If the cause for
diminished fish stocks is not related to fishing,
i.e. environmental;
-
If the end goal for
amount of fish to be replenished is changed within
that 10 years (for example, if a fishery is seven
years into a plan to rebuild its stock by 5,000
fish, and then is told it must increase its stock
to 20,000 fish, it should have additional time to
do so); and
-
If a multi-stock
fishery only has one species that is diminished,
the whole fishery should not have to be set back
by strict provisions for just one species.
At an April 25 hearing
in New Bedford, Mass.,
Dr. Steve Murawski, of the National Marine
Fisheries Institute, agreed that the 10-year
provision is arbitrary, saying that it " leaves us
very little flexibility in terms of our realistic
time lines and more based on species biology."
For more information
on H.R. 5018, please
click here. |