Daily Archives: January 30, 2013

SAVING SEAFOOD ANALYSIS: Making Sense of Reference Points, Proxies, and F40%

The scientific basis for the current “reference points” used for  New England groundfish management has recently been questioned by  respected scientists, industry members, and elected officials. The  largest organization representinglogo groundfishermen in New England, and  the mayor of the nation’s most profitable seaport, have asked the New  England Fishery Management Council to reconsider the calculation and use  of the current reference points.
Because this issue is highly technical and development of the current  reference points are the result of a unique history, Saving Seafood has  undertaken this analysis to shed some light on the background behind  these requests for reconsideration. Read  the analysis

Alaska Department of Fish and Game Releases New Chinook Salmon Stock Assessment

Chinook Salmon Research Plan and 2012 Symposium Draft Research Plan.  Here

Our View: Groundfishing limits are a disaster for this region

What is happening to the Northeast’s groundfishing industry is a natural disaster, just as devastating as a drought or a wildfire. But the federal government is just making it worse. Fishermen have been regulated under several regimes designed to rebuild the threatened stocks of cod and other species, while still allowing enough fishing for some fishermen to survive financially. Read more

Groundfishing meeting could make or break industry – WMTW video here

American Alliance of Fishermen and their Communities (AAFC) – a formal FOIA Request

American Alliance of Fishermen and their Communities (AAFC)AAFC

“PRESERVING OUR NATION’S FISHERIES FOR ALL AMERICA” P.O. Box 5490 Wakefield R.I. 02880 401-837-6932 [email protected]

January 29, 2013

The Honorable Dr. Jane Lubchenco Under Secretary of Commerce Administrator of NOAA 1401 Constitution Ave NW Room 5128 Washington DC 20230

Dear Dr. Lubchenco, Read more

Editorial: NOAA regional chief cannot ignore lawmakers’ call . Will he? Listen via webinar at todays NEFMC Meeting

First-year NOAA regional administrator John Bullard, who heads the regulation of fisheries from Maine through North Carolina from his perch in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration building in Gloucester’s Blackburn Industrial Park, says he doesn’t believe the Magnuson-Stevens Act allows the flexibility to extend the current Gulf of Maine cod limits, which cut 22 percent from fishermen’s allowable catch a year ago, for another year. Read more

REMINDER Attend the NEFMC Council Meeting – via WEBINAR Wednesday,January 30, 2013. 9:00 a.m. Register to Listen Live Register to Listen Live Register to Listen Live Register to Listen Live