What's In
Store for 2006?
By Ted Venker
From the January/February 2006 Issue
of TIDE Magazine
It is often said that a
New Year's resolution goes in one year and out the other, but there is
no denying that the arrival of a fresh 12 months is always exciting and
full of possibility.
The New Year is a natural time to make
commitments about doing better in the coming year than we did in the
past. For example, billions of diets and exercise programs have
been launched in the first minutes of January, often inspired by
multiple glasses of bubbly. Some of those promises have succeeded, at
least temporarily, as the gyms and fitness clubs pack ‘em in daily…until
about March.
For most of us, the secret to keeping a
resolution is setting the resolution effectively in the first place.
Vowing to achieve world peace is perhaps setting the bar a bit too high
while pledging to wake up every day before noon isn’t really stretching
the limits of your abilities.
In between is something called a realistic
resolution, one that is attainable with hard work and discipline.
For a group like CCA, there are plenty of realistic goals to shoot for
in the Gulf of Mexico and all along the Atlantic coast. These goals
require that all four points of the CCA model are firing – membership,
advocacy, fundraising and communication.
The following is a
sample of some of the things your CCA will be focusing on in 2006:
“CCA
Virginia wants to make 2006 the year of the menhaden. 2006 is the year
the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission cap on the harvest of
menhaden takes effect in the Chesapeake Bay, and that is just the first
step. We will again support legislation to move all regulations on
menhaden out of state code and into the capable hands of the Virginia
Marine Resource Commission. These steps continue our conservation
efforts to improve the overall health of our treasured Chesapeake Bay.”
- David Hickman
Executive Director CCA Virginia
"CCA Louisiana resolves
that the disasters of 2005 will not be allowed to deter the chapter in
2006. Plans call for us to host our inaugural state convention as well
as our 12th annual STAR tournament as the state recovers steadily from
Katrina and Rita. If the last few events of 2005 were any
indication, a very full schedule of banquets and fundraisers set for all
areas of the state in 2006 will be phenomenally successful. Perhaps most
importantly, CCA Louisiana resolves not to get hit by any more
hurricanes."
- Jeff
Angers
Executive Director CCA Louisiana
“In 2006, CCA's Gulf of
Mexico Fisheries Conservation Program will work to get the National
Marine Fisheries Service and the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management
Council to significantly reduce shrimp bycatch (bykill) of juvenile red
snapper and initiate a reallocation of Gulf reef fish resources based on
a look to the future, not the overfished past.”
- Dr. Russell Nelson
CCA Gulf Fisheries Consultant
“We intend to widen the scope of our
influence in the Alabama during 2006. We do a good job of informing our
members, but we need to do a better job of educating our state and
federal legislators and other centers of influence around the state.
Alabama is on the verge of becoming a truly outstanding destination for
recreational fishermen, and I'm not sure our elected officials really
understand just how important our recreational fishery is. Our job in
2006 is to be better communicators of the message.”
-
Ed Williamson
Executive Director CCA Alabama
"CCA Maryland resolves to educate the public, Maryland
legislators, and the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) on the
importance of our recreational fisheries and to change the DNR's
management philosophy to better serve the resource and recreational
anglers. To that end we will work for no-sale status of yellow perch to
assist in their restoration, pursue measures to allow recreational
anglers to obtain their striped bass quota, and work to achieve a
comprehensive strategic fishery management plan for the restoration of
our native oysters."
- Sherman Baynard
CCA Maryland
These are just a few of
the things your CCA will be working on in the coming year. They may not
sound as glamorous as working for world peace or as personally appealing
as losing a few pounds, but they are worthy goals for any angler. With
the help of 90,000 committed members, it is much more certain that these
goals will be achieved by your CCA in 2006.