Fed's NOAA Fisheries trying to "Take Back" ARS Management"

Here we go again! Please read the following and then contact you Senators and Gulf area Congressional Representatives and ask them to contact the Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross to stop this grab by NOAA bureaucrats. The federal data is beyond flawed, and while the states aren’t perfect, they’re doing a much better job managing Red Snapper.
SEPTEMBER 24, 2020
Federal Regulators Seek to Undermine State Management of Red Snapper
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Washington –
Just two years after approving a plan to allow the Gulf states to develop their
own recreational data collection systems to better manage red snapper and
certifying those state programs, NOAA Fisheries intends to force the states to
calibrate their data back to the flawed federal data system that caused
significant turmoil in the first place. This federal data system, Marine
Recreational Information Program (MRIP), has been widely criticized by many in
the recreational fishing community, the states and in Congress, and its
limitations are what led each of the states to develop their own data
collection systems.
In recent communications to the states, NOAA Fisheries indicated it will adjust
state harvest data to be more in line with MRIP and show that Texas, Alabama
and Mississippi have overfished their quotas by significant margins. If NOAA
Fisheries is successful, it would likely mean that private boat recreational
anglers in Alabama would not have any season at all in federal waters for the
next one to two years, and Mississippi anglers would be shut down for the next
three years. After sending its recreational data to NOAA Fisheries 39 times
over the past two and a half years, Texas was first notified a few weeks ago
that NOAA Fisheries had elected to apply a different approach to the
length-to-weight conversion in the state’s data and determined the state was
overfishing its quota. Rather than work through the new formula going forward,
the agency placed a notice in the Federal Register announcing its intent to
take the overage out of future seasons. As a result, Texas anglers will face a
2021 season of just a couple of days in federal waters.
“There is clearly some gamesmanship going on, and rather than treat it as a
partnership, NOAA Fisheries seems to want to continue its adversarial
relationship with the states and with recreational anglers,” said Ted Venker,
conservation director for Coastal Conservation Association. “The federal
system for recreational anglers was so poor and untimely that the Gulf Council
passed Amendment 50 to allow the states to develop their own systems. After the
states invested the time and money to build more timely and accurate data
systems and operated them for more than two years, NOAA Fisheries now comes
back and says that all the new data must be converted back into its flawed
system for management purposes. And it puts us right back where we were before
Amendment 50 was adopted. It is absurd.”
In response, more than a dozen Gulf Coast
Congressmen have signed a letter urging U.S. Secretary of Commerce
Wilbur Ross to prevent any action on the calibration of state harvest data to
federal data until at least the Great Red Snapper Count is completed. The
snapper count is a two-year, intensive stock assessment being conducted by more
than a dozen marine research institutions across the Gulf Coast that was
authorized and funded by Congress due to a lack of confidence in NOAA
Fisheries’ own assessment work. The letter further asks that the Secretary use
his authority under Public Law 109-479(g) to declare the data from the Gulf
States as the best available science to inform future management decisions.
“When red snapper management completely failed in 2017, the five Gulf states
and Congress realized NOAA Fisheries does not have the tools or the will to
properly manage this fishery, and they took significant steps to remedy the
situation,” said Jeff Angers, president of the Center for Sportfishing Policy. “Since then, we
have seen the most successful red snapper seasons in the Gulf in the last
decade, but unfortunately, NOAA Fisheries seems intent on going back to
business as usual.”
“This all comes down to which is considered the ‘best available science,’” said
Chris Horton, director of fisheries policy for the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation. “MRIP was
never designed to manage to in-season closures, so the states developed their
own programs in order to provide their anglers with more access without going
over the quotas. Now that they’ve proven they can very successfully manage the
harvest during the season, the state programs - not MRIP - should be declared
to be the best available science to inform Gulf red snapper management.”
The Snook & Gamefish Foundation is now the Angler Action Program: http://angleractionfoundation.com/ Dedicated to Conservation and Education. Please check us out.
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The Snook & Gamefish Foundation is now the Angler Action Program: http://angleractionfoundation.com/ Dedicated to Conservation and Education. Please check us out.
Angler Action Program: IAngler app trip log on your phone