| U.S. House subcommittee will hold hearing on catch shares |
|
SEAFOOD.COM NEWS
[Gloucester Daily Times] By Patrick Anderson - March 12, 2010 - A
congressional subcommittee has called for the first public airing before
federal lawmakers of the Obama administration's nationwide push for the
kind of 'catch share' fisheries management that's due for a May 1 launch
in New England. The hearing next Tuesday before the House Subcommittee on
Insular Affairs, Oceans and Wildlife, will feature at least two West Coast
groups that have been critical of the push for catch shares, the Times has
confirmed. Representing the administration will be new National Marine
Fisheries Service head Eric Schwaab. The oversight hearing will be the
third in the last two weeks on fisheries issues, and it comes as scrutiny
of catch shares remains high in the wake of the 'United We Fish' rally in
Washington last month. But it will be the first time that the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's plan to advance catch shares
systems -- which essentially convert allocations of wild fish stocks into
private assets and divide them among stakeholders -- will be aired before
Congress. Unlike recent congressional reviews of fisheries issues -- like
last week's oversight hearing at Gloucester City Hall, which focused on
NOAA enforcement wrongdoing as outlined in a Department of Commerce
Inspector General's report --Tuesday's gathering will have a West Coast
feel. In addition to Schwaab, the Times has confirmed that Ed Backus of
the Portland, Ore., environmental group Ecotrust will testify. Among
environmental groups, Ecotrust has been one of the most skeptical voices
on the nationwide move for catch shares. Yesterday, Backus said he planned
to tell lawmakers that Congress should establish new standards and
safeguards -- such as community permit banking -- to prevent catch shares
from resulting in wholesale consolidation of fisheries and loss of fishing
communities. Backus called the approval of catch share systems through
regional councils 'politically capricious for implementing market
design.' As fishermen in
Gloucester and around New England brace for a switch in May to a sector
system based on catch share principals, anxiety in the Pacific Northwest
is rising as groundfish fisheries there are moving toward a catch share
system next year. Concerns about that program among Oregon fishermen will
bring Leesa Cobb of the Port Orford Ocean Resource Team, a cooperative in
southwest Oregon, to testify at the Catch Share hearing. 'The economic
analysis shows ports that would be winners and losers and the main thing
would be the ability to land fish.' Cobb said by phone yesterday.
'Possibly there could be a catch share program that works, but I couldn't
describe it for you.' The
final witness list for the hearing has not been set, but so far no other
fishing industry witnesses have been identified.
|
| Shortages, sales to Chinese at sea, plague Vietnam's efforts to get EU catch certificates |
|
SEAFOOD.COM
NEWS [Vietnam News Summary] March 12, 2010 - |