View Full Version : New Regs


Skitterpop
12-13-2006, 09:06 AM
December 13, 2006

Fishermen hope to tip scales
By DOUG FRASER
STAFF WRITER
Cape Cod fishermen don't mince words about the cod, haddock and flounder regulations that have whittled fishing days down to 30 a year with little improvement in depleted fish populations.
http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/images/fishermen13.jpg
http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/images/bullet2.gif Joe Joseph, left, and Bill Barabe, crew members on the gill-netter Cuda, unload a fish tote of cod yesterday at the Chatham Fish Pier. Below, a load of the Cuda's codfish sits on the fish pier's sorting table.
(Staff photo by Steve Heaslip)
''Everybody in this business is just disgusted with the way it's being managed,'' Chatham cod fisherman John Our said this week.
Attempting to get fishery management back on the right track, Congress last weekend passed its first major revision of the Magnuson-Stevens Act in a decade.
The act sets national standards that govern the country's regional fishery management councils and the National Marine Fisheries Service, which in turn write regulations to protect and rebuild the nation's fish stocks.
Reacting to pressure from environmentalists and fishermen, Congress essentially decided it was time to try something new. The revised Magnuson-Stevens Act strengthens the role of scientists in setting annual fish catch quotas and mandates the fisheries service to end overfishing immediately. It also advocates new management techniques intended to give fishermen a greater voice.
For the past decade or more, New England has cutback fishing days, limited daily catches and mandated gear changes that make it more difficult for fishermen to catch fish.
But with more than 1,000 fishermen chasing cod and other bottom-feeding species, those regulations proved too inexact. Chronic overfishing, and the wasteful discarding of fish that exceeded daily quotas, kept New England fish stocks from recovering. This, in turn, resulted in even harsher regulations.
In revising the Magnuson-Stevens Act, Congress, led by Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, went to the North Pacific playbook and enacted rules that give fishermen shares in the annual fish quota and allow them to manage a fishery like an employee-owned business.
Alaskan halibut fishermen, for instance, each have a percentage of a quota, based on what they historically caught before the quota system was instituted. Fishermen report daily landings electronically to keep from exceeding the annual allowable catch. It's in their own best interest to keep the halibut population robust. The more fish there are, the more each fisherman can catch.
Innovative Cape fishermen saw the merits in self-management years ago. For the past 18 months, 58 Cape hook fishermen - who catch fish with long lines of thousands of baited hooks - have controlled a 12.8 percent share of the annual Georges Bank cod quota. Following their lead, Cape gill-net fishermen received approval from the fisheries service last month to manage another 20 percent of the Georges Bank cod quota.
John Our is one of those 12 gill-net fishermen. Gill nets are rectangular panels of netting that stand vertically in the water, tethered between anchors and surface buoys. Fish swim into these nets and get entangled around their gills.
On a recent fishing trip, Our put out three sets of nets, catching his daily cod limit of 1,000 pounds by the time he'd hauled in the first two sets of nets. The third string of nets was loaded down with an additional thousand pounds.
Current regulations required Our to throw the additional thousand pounds of fish back into the water, even though they were dead. The discarded fish would have earned him thousands of more dollars for that fishing day.
Under the new gill-net management plan, Our said, he could keep any daily catch, as long as he didn't go over his annual portion of the quota. When he did reach that amount, Our would tie up his boat for the year.
Scientists aren't sure how much catch fishermen are throwing back to avoid going over their daily limits, but it is believed to be a big factor in the failure to rebuild some species such as cod. Our believes the new plan not only ends wasteful discarding, but also allows fishermen to catch the quota in less time, using less fuel, with less impact on fish stocks.
The plan reserves a portion of the 12 Cape Cod gill-net fishermen's overall quota as a buffer in case anyone does go over. An additional amount is reserved in case the group catches any cod while they are pursuing other species, such as monkfish.
With some scientists predicting the virtual extinction of commercially fished species within 40 or 50 years, federal managers are not just going to rely on fishermen to be honest.
This year, all groundfish vessels were required to install satellite monitoring devices that tell fisheries service enforcement agents where each boat is at all times.
Additional high-tech devices, including real-time electronic reporting of the catch and onboard cameras, are also being considered.
''People are going to resist change, but if you want to have accountable management, you have to have the tools to do it,'' said Peter Baker, fishing program director for the Cape Cod Commercial Hook Fishermen's Association.
Many feel that, with the Magnuson-Stevens Act revision and widespread discontent over current regulations, more fishermen will be turning to self-management. It's an appealing option when compared with the difficulty of staying in business with only 30 days to fish.
In the 1990s, Chatham day-
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But while that arrangement got Our enough fishing days to remain profitable, it did not help the effort to restore fish populations. ''What they're doing now is not working to the nth degree,'' Chatham gill-net fisherman Mark Smith said. ''We're trying. Guys want to see the fishing come back."

Sluggoslinger
12-13-2006, 09:28 AM
That makes a lot of sense from someone who fished for 2 years on a chatham gill-netter. We used to all work together and if you got more than you needed, you would just pull up along side another boat and give them fish but when you are trying to throw the cod 10-15ft to the other boat only about 75% made it in. We'd also let other boats haul your gear. Our is probably one of the best fisherman in chatham. He's also a great Tuna fisherman.

numbskull
12-13-2006, 09:39 AM
The whole thing pisses me off. Years ago I could go out to F....ing Middleground for Christ's sake, 3 miles from Falmouth, in December and catch cod to 50lbs! We would catch them trolling sow and pigs in Sept. We'd fish SW shoal each spring with good results (other than losing a million jigs on trot lines). Year after year I've listened to the same wishful crap from commerical fisherman and fishery managers alike. I've watched the price of cod exceed that of lobster and swordfish. I've watched my father grow old without the fishery he planned to spend his final years enjoying. I trudge around barren ponds hoping to catch a single 10" man made trout, when years past I'd be jigging cod. Pathetic. Inexcusable. Wrong. Long past time for drastic action. This fishery should have been closed 10 years ago, and not reopened until it was fixed. That is still what is needed, regardless of the impact on the people who have brought it to this sorry state.

BasicPatrick
12-13-2006, 10:14 AM
I find it sort of sad that in the article above it reports that Our needed two Gill Nets to get his daily limit but set three nets. This "game" has been played for years. Why put more gear in the water then is needed to take your limit? The answer is simple, because on the days when there are no observers you can land more than your limit and sell it or have someone else sell it. As the fleets have become more efficient, and as cutbacks have been enacted, commercial fishermen have continued to "overfish"(also noted in the above article). None of the current failed management plans have succeeded partially because of the constant "games" being played with the regulations. When the government has sponsored buyouts of permits and boats, many, and I mean many commercial fishers just sold their old boat and permit then bought another, never really getting out of a business, which was the purpose of the feds having the buyouts to begin with. It is just sad that the WHOLE system has deteriorated into the mess that it is. I hope some day there is a solution.

Sluggoslinger
12-13-2006, 10:14 AM
The whole thing pisses me off. Years ago I could go out to F....ing Middleground for Christ's sake, 3 miles from Falmouth, in December and catch cod to 50lbs! We would catch them trolling sow and pigs in Sept. We'd fish SW shoal each spring with good results (other than losing a million jigs on trot lines). Year after year I've listened to the same wishful crap from commerical fisherman and fishery managers alike. I've watched the price of cod exceed that of lobster and swordfish. I've watched my father grow old without the fishery he planned to spend his final years enjoying. I trudge around barren ponds hoping to catch a single 10" man made trout, when years past I'd be jigging cod. Pathetic. Inexcusable. Wrong. Long past time for drastic action. This fishery should have been closed 10 years ago, and not reopened until it was fixed. That is still what is needed, regardless of the impact on the people who have brought it to this sorry state.

I can't say I disagree with you. The new regs are a step in the right direction but in reality we need a serious evluation of how to fix it with no care for the impact on the fisherman who did screw it up. Gill nets are not a good thing... trust me. You name it, we caught it. Just think of all the Ghost nets out there resulting from this method of fishing. They will catch fish for thousands of years now...:skulz:

Sluggoslinger
12-13-2006, 10:18 AM
I remember fishing the area off wellfleet one year. The fish were thick there and we were getting 2000 pounds on one or two strings. The whole fleet planked the area and there was no, I mean no way out for the fish... one string is a half mile and there strings everywere... We caught the whole school in a matter of days. It makes me sick to think about it... I think we moved to the crab ledge and did the same thing again there...