FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE Dec. 1, 2005
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
Judge Slams Door on Second Grouper Gambit
FORT
MYERS, FL – Strike two.
On the heels of his
decision to nullify an interim rule closing all grouper fishing in
the Gulf of Mexico for November and December, a U.S. District Court
judge has flatly denied a request by the National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS) to reconsider his decision.
United States
District Court Judge John E. Steele ruled earlier this month that
NMFS had acted “arbitrarily [and] capriciously” in promulgating an
interim rule that would have shut down fishing for 16 species of
grouper in the Gulf of Mexico for those two months in order to halt
the harvest of red grouper. The judge left no doubt earlier this
week that his decision is final after NMFS approached the court with
a request to reconsider the decision.
“It is apparent that
Judge Steele has a firm grasp on the facts of this case and remains
convinced that NMFS’ original action in the red grouper fishery was
completely unnecessary and an abuse of authority,” said Coastal
Conservation Association (CCA) Government Relations Committee
Chairman Fred Miller. “We’ve always supported measures to conserve
fish species, but obviously this type of action cannot be allowed to
stand.”
CCA filed a lawsuit
in August challenging the authority of the U.S. Secretary of
Commerce to close the entire recreational grouper fishery in the
Gulf of Mexico. The interim rule was initiated when the estimated
recreational catch of red grouper jumped from 1.536 million pounds
in 2003 to 3.53 million pounds in 2004, an unprecedented increase
that was made even more suspect with four major hurricanes hitting
Florida in 2004.
In response to the
2004 survey numbers for red grouper, NMFS implemented interim
measures reducing the red grouper bag limit to one fish and placing
a total closure on the recreational harvest of all grouper species
for the months of November and December. A ruling issued by Judge
Steele in late October allowed the closure of recreational fishing
for only red grouper in November and December, but rejected the
closure that applied to all other species of Gulf grouper.
“It is customary for
the judge to allow the other parties involved in the lawsuit to
oppose the government’s request to reconsider a decision, but Judge
Steele elected not to do that in this case,” said David Howton, CCA
Florida chairman.. “His decision to deny the request without any
opposition should be a clear signal to NMFS that their attempts to
circumvent the system will not be tolerated.”
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