CCA
Intervenes to Protect Conservation Victory
HOUSTON, TX
– Coastal Conservation Association (CCA) has taken action to prevent a
lawsuit filed by the Ocean Conservancy from unraveling a compromise
agreement governing two areas in the Gulf of Mexico.
The compromise, hammered out among CCA, the
Gulf of Mexico Fisheries Management Council and the National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS) in 2003, allows recreational anglers to
troll for highly migratory species on the surface while restricting
bottom fishing for stressed gag grouper stocks in the Madison Swanson
and Steamboat Lumps areas off the Florida coast. CCA has intervened in
the lawsuit on the side of NMFS.
“It is exactly this kind of arbitrary and
capricious action that characterizes the entire Marine Protected Area (MPA)
debate,” said Fred Miller, chairman of the CCA Government Relations
Committee. “This particular issue has run on for more than five years.
Expert testimony showing that it is virtually impossible to catch
grouper on the reefs using conventional trolling techniques targeting
pelagics on the surface hundreds of feet above the bottom is in the
record. Yet here we are having to defend a perfectly reasonable solution
to a relatively simple problem once again.”
“With this lawsuit, the Ocean Conservancy is
demonstrating that the only solution they will accept is one that
supports their preconceived objectives,” said Michael Kennedy, chairman
of CCA Florida. “This lawsuit is nothing but an attempt to circumvent
the process until they find a court that agrees with their views.”
In 1999, it was determined that the
Madison-Swanson and Steamboat Lumps areas are home to significant
spawning aggregations of gag grouper. CCA supported the initial proposal
to close the areas to all bottom fishing to recover those troubled
stocks. However, when the proposal was expanded to include banning all
fishing in the two areas, CCA filed suit in federal district court.
CCA argued that preventing fishing for unrelated and healthy
fish stocks in the upper-levels of the water column was unnecessary to
conserve gag grouper residing on the bottom, 200 to 400 feet below the
surface.
In a settlement agreement between CCA and
NMFS reached in 2001, NMFS agreed not to ban trolling for highly
migratory species in the closed areas and to conduct research to
determine if it was possible for recreational fishermen trolling on the
surface for mackerel, billfish, wahoo and other species to catch gag
grouper.
Although NMFS never successfully completed
the research program mandated by the agreement, the results presented
and information provided by CCA’s scientific consultant and expert
anglers persuaded the Council to maintain a total ban on bottom fishing
in the two areas, allow surface trolling from May to November and close
the areas to all fishing during the winter months when gag grouper
gather there to spawn and pelagic species are virtually absent from the
area. The Council also adopted CCA’s recommendation to provide an
additional conservation measure by prohibiting the possession of any
reef fish while in the Madison-Swanson and Steamboat Lumps areas.
“We simply cannot allow the proponents of
exclusion to win a precedent in court that could be used to arbitrarily
close waters wherever groups like the Ocean Conservancy think it is
necessary,” said Miller. “If they cannot accept an agreement like this,
it is obvious that they are not interested in compromise.”