For
Immediate Release
April 25, 2006
Contact: Melissa Mazzella DeLaney (202) 226-9019
Both bills would reauthorize the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act, initially passed in 1976,
which oversees fisheries resources and fishing activities in Federal waters and
established the eight Regional Fishery Management Councils responsible for the
conservation and management of U.S. Fishery resources.
"Today we heard from several local
witnesses who feel strongly that such reauthorization and refinement of
Magnuson-Stevens is long overdue," Chairman Pombo said. "It is
critical for fishery managers to have the tools they need to develop flexible
rebuilding plans that do not also devastate the local economy, especially for
the many New Englanders who consider fishing to be more than just a vocation -
it's a way of life."
The process of managing fisheries is
accomplished through the preparation of a fishery management plan (FMP) for each
fishery. These FMPs require scientific assessments of the fishery resources and
then the issuance of conservative allocations of catch for the domestic fishing
fleet. The Regional Councils or the Secretary of Commerce have prepared and
implemented more than 40 FMPs, some of which have been amended numerous times.
"I am grateful to Chairman Pombo for
today's hearing, and I believe we succeeded in giving a very representative
segment of the commercial fishing industry in southeastern
The Magnuson-Stevens Act was authorized through
FY 1999. Since 2000, the House Resources Committee has held 16 hearings and
heard from 133 witnesses on issues associated with the reauthorization. In the
109th Congress alone, the Resources Committee has held four hearings on the
reauthorization of this important act.
"If there's anything our fishermen can
understand, it's how precarious their futures are," said Debra Shrader,
executive director of Shore Support, Inc., and who testified at today's hearing.
"Single boat owners and many fishermen will not be around when stocks
finally rebound because most fisherman have either had their right to harvest
fish taken away or it has diminished to the point where they have to choose
between supporting their families and listening to the calling in their hearts
to continue to work at sea."
Those invited to testify at today's hearing included: Dr. Steven Murawski,
director of scientific programs and chief science advisor at the National Marine
Fisheries Service; Dr. Brian Rothschild, dean of the University of Massachusetts
Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology; Ms. Debra Shrader, President
of Shore Support, Inc.; Mr. David Bergeron, coordinator of the Massachusetts
Fishermen's Partnership; Mr. Chris Wright, scallop fisherman; Dr. Andrew
Rosenberg, Institute for Study of Earth, Oceans and Space at the University of
New Hampshire; and Ms. Jacqueline Odell, executive director for the Northeast
Seafood Coalition.
For More Information on H.R. 5018 and Bill Text, Click Here