FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: June 13, 2005
CONTACT: Ted Venker, 1-800-201-FISH
CCA Founder Named “Legend of Fishing”
HOUSTON, TX
– In the May 2005 issue of Field & Stream, writer John Merwin
selects 50 legends of fishing, choosing among writers, showmen,
teachers, conservationists, innovators, and tycoons. Under the section
dedicated to The Conservationists, CCA National Chairman Walter
Fondren heads the list for his part in the creation of the Gulf Coast
Conservation Association in 1976 and in guiding its evolution into the
national Coastal Conservation Association.
“I am proud to be included with such a
prestigious group of anglers, but even more than that, I am glad that
the creativity, commitment and perseverance of the tens of thousands
of CCA members and volunteers have been recognized,” Fondren said.
“You don’t accomplish what CCA has been able to achieve over the past
30 years by working alone. It has been my privilege to work with some
of the most dedicated and hard-working people you will ever meet. This
kind of recognition validates the work they have done, and will
continue to do.”
In crafting the list, Merwin explains
that to become a legend, you must have had an impact on the sport. The
list spans centuries and includes luminaries such as Izaak Walton,
Mary Orvis Marbury, Zane Grey, Ernest Hemingway, Lefty Kreh and John
Morris. People on the list “didn’t necessarily catch the most fish or
the largest fish, but their contributions changed fishing forever,”
Merwin writes.
With Fondren as national chairman CCA
has been involved in many impressive conservation victories, including
the banning of gill nets in several states, establishing game fish
status for species in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic,
implementing bycatch-reduction guidelines for the shrimp industry, and
passing a 1994 constitutional amendment in Florida banning the use of
any type of entangling net in state waters.
With more than 90,000 members in more
than 180 local chapters in 15 states spanning the Gulf of Mexico and
Atlantic seaboard, the impact of CCA’s grassroots machine is
unparalleled. Determined to “change fishing forever,” CCA has focused
on restoring coastal marine resources and bringing them back to
healthy levels.
“It is gratifying to see a respected
publication like Field and Stream recognize Walter Fondren. He was the
right man at the right time,” said Alex Jernigan, CCA vice chairman.
“Many recreational anglers all over the country knew there were
problems that had to be addressed. He was not only able to identify
the problem; he had the ability to create the solution. CCA has been
the solution for marine resources.”