Stand Up and
Be Counted
By embracing a
saltwater fishing license, recreational anglers become a force to be
reckoned with in fisheries management.
By Walter W. Fondren III
Chairman of Coastal Conservation Association
Walter W. Fondren III is one of the original founders
of Coastal Conservation Association and has helped guide the
organization to some of its greatest conservation victories. Under his
watch, CCA has successfully banned gill nets in several states, won
game fish status for several fish species in the Gulf of Mexico and in
the Atlantic, established bycatch-reduction guidelines for the shrimp
industry, and won a complete commercial net ban in Florida.
It has been proven time and again that
our marine resources are not infinite. Efficient, modern
technology is capable of simply overwhelming our oceans.
Diesel-powered boats equipped with an array of electronic equipment,
guided by spotter planes, utilizing monofilament gill nets, huge
bottom trawls and miles of longlines have proven more than a match for
many species of fish.
The New England ground
fishery, for example, is a faint shadow of its former productivity,
and there are indications that after decades of commercial overfishing,
it might not ever recover. Locals recall a time when the ocean teemed
with bait, fish, birds and whales. It is a virtual desert now in some
areas.
When we
first formed Coastal Conservation Association more than a quarter
century ago, our goal was to prevent that kind of reckless abuse of
our marine resources. In our early skirmishes with gill-netters along
the Texas coast, we quickly found that the real power to conserve or
destroy our marine resources does not lie with the technology. The
real power in this battle is political.
The
commercial fishing industry enjoys the kind of political power that
comes from being a small, but concentrated source of jobs, economic
activity and influence. Technology alone did not wipe out groundfish
stocks off New England. Even after it became very apparent what was
happening to the resource, the considerable political clout held by
the commercial fishing industry for generations in that region allowed
the destruction to continue almost to the point of no-return.
CCA has
seen firsthand what a politically active, well-financed and motivated
minority of businesses are capable of achieving in fisheries
management. Often, millions of recreational anglers have found
themselves on the sidelines as decisions were made that led to the
decimation of some species of fish. There is strength in numbers, but
only if someone is counting. The owner of a seafood company that
employs 100 people has historically wielded far more power in the
fishery management arena than a vast, silent, unknown population of
recreational anglers. That seafood company’s payroll, landings data
and bottom line provide a tiny snapshot of the value associated with a
particular fishery, but it may be the only snapshot. That monopoly on
information translates into political power.
However, CCA has found that recreational fishermen do have a weapon to
level the playing field and provide a more realistic evaluation of our
marine resources: a saltwater recreational fishing license.
Sometimes leadership means taking unpopular positions, and few issues
have angered and confused anglers more than the subject of a saltwater
recreational fishing license. CCA has fought for licenses in states
all along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts. It is a difficult issue,
especially in the Northeast, and we have lost more than a few members
over it. Regardless, implementation of a saltwater recreational
fishing license is the most important single step that a state can
take to conserve and improve its fisheries.
The
saltwater license remains a bedrock principle for CCA and I firmly
believe the benefits far outweigh the costs.
On the
surface, it is very easy to attack licenses as nothing more than just
another tax to raise money for the government. For recreational
anglers, this is a much deeper issue than that. While some people see
a license as a tax and others refer to it as a user fee, the fact
remains that a license is a mechanism that enables recreational
anglers to have a seat at the bargaining table when critical fisheries
management issues are decided.
To
argue against a license is essentially to argue for representation
without taxation and, in this business, you get what you pay for. From
a historical perspective, in those states where saltwater licenses
have been implemented, recreational anglers have been able to achieve
near-miraculous conservation victories.
NUMBERS GAME
It is
not all uncommon for the commercial fishing sector to argue in public
against the need for a saltwater recreational fishing license, only to
have those same people dismiss recreational arguments before federal,
regional or state regulatory agencies because recreational anglers
don't "pay to play."
When
300,000 recreational anglers pay $15 each to register for a saltwater
license, I assure you that we are suddenly major players in the game.
However, the reality of a saltwater license is that the money it
generates is secondary. The real value of a license is in the data.
Regardless of how much money is generated or where it goes in a state
budget, the most important function of a license is to provide a
simple count of recreational saltwater anglers in a given state.
I have
often stated that if you took all the money brought in by a saltwater
recreational license and literally gave it to the commercial fishing
industry, recreational anglers would still have the advantage. That is
a shocking statement, but it is the truth. Why? Government
bureaucracies tend to pay attention to large voting constituencies,
and the license defines the enormous scope of the recreational angling
constituency. Those numbers simply cannot be ignored in our political
system.
Without
a recreational license, the community of saltwater anglers and the
millions of dollars they spend each year cannot be accurately
established, and don’t think our opponents in the commercial sector
don’t use that against us. A recreational license does not buy power
or influence. It is merely a tool to reflect the numeric and economic
reality of the recreational fishing industry in a state.
That
reality, however, quickly reveals that the economic activity generated
by hundreds of thousands of recreational anglers dwarfs that of the
commercial sector in almost every state. The last thing the commercial
fishing industry wants to see is a substantial dollar figure labeled
“Recreational Fishing” in the state budget.
CHECK THE SOURCE
Perhaps
those recreational anglers opposed to the saltwater license should
check to see who they are standing with shoulder-to-shoulder in this
debate. The most vocal anti-recreational license arguments are usually
commercial fishermen. The commercial fishing industry rarely utters a
word in protest of its own license and fee structure, yet it is
vehemently opposed to a recreational license
Why do
commercial fishermen, who will not be asked to pay one cent for a
saltwater recreational fishing license, argue so strongly against it?
Simple. For decades the commercial fishing industry has benefited from
being the only paying constituency in fisheries management. They are
all too familiar with what is at stake politically if they are
suddenly confronted with a large, unified, politically powerful,
revenue-generating constituency of recreational anglers. The days of
thousands of commercial fishermen making decisions for millions of
recreational anglers would be over.
Perhaps
there is no better argument for the license than the words of Jerry
Schill, executive director of the North Carolina Fisheries
Association, a non-profit commercial fishermen trade association.
Schill has been leading the fight against a saltwater
recreational fishing license in North Carolina.
“Look
at what has happened in the other states,” he said in the November
2003 issue of National Fisherman. “Look what the CCA has done with
that license when it’s been put into place. In some states you’ve got
fish that have been given ‘game fish’ status, taken off consumers’
plates. In other states, gillnet bans. And in Florida, they got the
ultimate: a commercial net ban.”
Well
said. It is as simple as that.