FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE December 18, 2008
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
CCA Calls for
Denial of Longline Permits
Longliners seek extension and expansion of permits to
fish in conservation zones.
Alarmed at the growing prospect of
“longline creep,” conservationists are calling on the National
Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to deny a request to extend and
expand Exempted Fishing Permits issued in 2008 that cracked open the
door for the commercial longline industry to fish in conservation
zones created in the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean
Sea. Citing a host of concerns in a letter to NMFS, Coastal
Conservation Association is demanding that the original permits be
allowed to expire on Feb. 28, 2009.
In its final
comments, CCA requested that all data on the longline fishery
gathered in 2008 be released to the public; NMFS conduct all
necessary environmental reviews and analyses under the National
Environmental Policy Act; the comment period on this matter be
extended so that the public can take into account the data already
developed, and no permits be re-issued or extended until the public
has had a chance to review the information requested.
“From the very
beginning this has been a thinly veiled excuse to re-introduce
longlining, under the guise of a bycatch study, back into areas that
were justifiably closed to such gear,” said Chester Brewer, vice
chairman of the CCA National Government Relations Committee. “NMFS
allowed longliners back into those zones, and the agency’s own
reports indicate that there has been substantial bycatch and
mortality of undersized swordfish, other fish species and threatened
and endangered sea turtles from those industrial fishing operations.
There is no valid reason to allow this charade to go on any longer.”
The conservation
zones were originally implemented to eliminate bycatch and mortality
of sailfish, marlins and undersized swordfish. Over the objections
of CCA and other conservation groups, NMFS allowed longliners back
into the zones in 2008 to test gear modifications and fishing
techniques that were supposed to avoid incidental capture of
non-target species. With the permits set to expire, the longline
industry is requesting not only that the “study” be allowed to
continue, but that the area open to the commercial gear be expanded
10 nautical miles further west toward the east coast of Florida.
“NMFS has yet to
fulfill its own obligation to monitor the impact of the industrial
fishing they allowed last year. How can they consider extending and
expanding the exempted fishing permits when they haven’t even
reviewed and analyzed the data from 2008?” asked Fred Miller,
chairman of the CCA National Government Relations Committee. “Those
permits need to expire once and for all. Any gear modification can
be studied in the areas where longliners currently set their gear.
To say they need to continue to try them in protected areas simply
strains their credibility even further.”
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CCA
is the largest marine resource conservation group of its kind in the
nation. With almost 100,000 members in 17 state chapters, CCA has
been active in state, national and international fisheries
management issues since 1977. Visit
www.JoinCCA.org for
more information.