The
following news item is one of several on the subject that is circulating
throughout the Alaska fishing community these days.
Some thoughts from Captain Mac -
As
many of you know, I have been involved in fisheries politics for over 30 years.
Since 1993 I have been particularly active in halibut issues. Halibut is a
“federal” fish, by virtue of the fact that it is managed by an international
convention between the U.S. and Canada.
As
an international, federally managed fish, many layers of law and bureaucracy
affect halibut. The primary U.S. agency that governs halibut is the Department
of Commerce, and its sub-agencies, NOAA fisheries, and the National Marine
Fisheries Service, or NMFS. The primary laws affecting halibut are the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982, and the Magnuson-Stevens Act, commonly called “The
200-mile limit law” because it kept hungry foreign fishing fleets beyond 200
miles of our coastline.
In
addition to many other facets of the law, Magnuson-Stevens created a series of eight
Fishery Management Councils that cover the entire U.S coastline, including the
Gulf of Mexico and the eastern seaboard. The Council that is responsible for
the federal waters and fish off Alaska is called the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (NPFMC) and is usually referred to as the ”North Council.”
The
Council process is very deliberative and is constrained by many federal laws
and processes requiring in-depth analysis, public input and rigid
administrative procedures. It takes forever to get anything through the Council
and into law or regulation, and sometimes by the time it becomes law it is
already flawed and outdated. State fisheries management does not have near as
much red tape.
Some
would say that the Council process is proper in that it mandates these
deliberative procedures and assures that the public is involved in the process.
It sounds good, but in practice it doesn’t always work the way it was intended,
especially at the North Council as it struggles to deal with recreational
fisheries.
The
various commercial fisheries off Alaska are huge, so it follows that federal
concern and jurisdiction is almost entirely directed toward commercial, not
recreational fisheries. As a result most of the North Council’s eleven voting members
are linked to, or have commercial fishing backgrounds. Even the State of Alaska’s
representative on the Council, the Commissioner of the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game (ADFG) invariably comes from the commercial sector of state
fisheries management. In fact there is only one recreational fishery representative
on the North Council. One out of eleven. So it is little wonder that issues involving
recreational fisheries that compete with commercial interests do not get a fair
hearing. Votes involving recreational issues are defeated by a 10 to 1 margin
with monotonous regularity. The North Council also has an Advisory Panel (AP)
comprising about 20 members, give or take. Similarly there is only one, or
occasionally two recreational representatives on the AP. And similarly, in
spite of a preponderance of public comment to the contrary, recreational issues
go down by votes of 19 to 1 or 2. The North Council was intentioned to deal
with commercial fisheries and it was never envisioned, nor is it structured or
equipped to deal fairly and appropriately with recreational fishing issues.
What
recreational fishing issues does the North Council have to deal with? There is
only one. Halibut. The federal fish. And it is a minuscule amount of fish in
the grand scheme of the fisheries of the North Pacific that the Council must
deal with on a regular basis.
And
how does one get to be a voting member on the Councils? Through political
recommendations and appointments. Surprise, surprise.
Since
1993 I have served on three committees at the NPFMC relating to sport and
charter halibut issues. No, I was not a political appointee. I volunteered and
paid all my own travel, lodging and meal expenses to serve on those committees.
I wanted to know what was going on in the federal regulation of our industry so
I could prepare myself and inform other charter operators and lodge owners.
So
what has all this to do with the news article and Arne Fuglvog?
Ten
months in jail is only the beginning of his worries. He is still a young man,
in his forties. He will also pay $150,000 in fines. His licenses will likely be
stripped from him, and the fishing community will hold him in contempt for the
rest of his life. He is a fifth-generation commercial fisherman who has held many
influential positions in fisheries management agencies and has been awarded the
U.S. National Fisherman Highliner of the
Year as well as the commercial fishermen’s union’s United Fishermen of Alaska's Fisherman of the Year.
It will be a long way down for Arne.
http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/former-murkowski-fisheries-aide-headed-prison
It will be a long way down for Arne.
http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/former-murkowski-fisheries-aide-headed-prison
But
the real tragedy in this story is that the behavior that brought down Arne is
not limited to just this one person. Rumors and stories are rampant about the
abuses that commercial fishermen inflict on the resources upon which they
depend for their livelihood. There is a mentality among many (not all, but
many) in the fleet that says, “I need to get mine before it is all gone.” Arne
was an icon, an award-winning professional, a highliner. If Arne is not above
such action, then who in the commercial fishing industry is? The word on the
street in his home town of Petersburg is that many are worried about what Arne
knows, and who he might implicate to mitigate his own circumstances.
Meanwhile
the charter industry is being subjected to what I believe is unprecedented
scrutiny, and dare I say harassment, by federal (NOAA/NMFS/USCG) enforcement
activities. Do I have proof of this? Can I produce statistics and history of
enforcement activities? No, I cannot. All I know is that in all my years in the
business I do not recall a time when there has been this much going on,
enforcement wise, in the charter industry. I also know that when the USCG
launch comes alongside in preparation for a boarding, the first question they
ask these days is, “Do you have any halibut on board?” If you say no, they will
usually not board you. If you say yes, they certainly will. Why is the Coast
Guard so interested in halibut all of a sudden? And why should that affect
whether they board you or not?
The
agencies will tell you there is justification for these actions. That may well
be true. They certainly have been able to make their charges stick. But what
about the likes of Arne in the commercial sector? Is there a like amount of
energy being directed towards them? How much damage can a commercial vessel
inflict as compared to the average charterboat? The commercial take of the
halibut resource is over 80%. Certain sectors of the commercial fisheries waste
up to three times the total sport halibut catch. If conservation concerns are
really what is driving these enforcement activities, couldn’t that effort be
better directed where there is a greater possibility of some serious damage
being done?
Breaking
the law cannot be condoned, no matter who it is or in what sector it occurs. And
you can’t fault the boots in the boats, the enforcement officers and Coast
Guard men and women. They are courteous and professional in doing their duty
and carrying out their instructions. But you have to ask, where are their
orders coming from and why is this apparent increase in enforcement attention,
effort and money being directed at the charter industry at this time?
Charter
operators, particularly in Southeast Alaska have been subjected to halibut
restrictions that, if left in place for just a few more years, will decimate
the industry and eliminate it as a competing fishery for halibut. Could the politically powerful and
well-healed commercial sector have a stake in the outcome? Could people like
Arne, closely aligned with commercial fishing interests and very tight with top
federal regulators, have influenced the decisions that have caused so much
chaos in the recreational side of the halibut fishery? When Southeast Alaska
charter fishermen are eliminated as viable competitors for halibut, who is
next?
And
ask yourself which sector, commercial or sport, has the potential to do the
most damage to the halibut resource. Remember the story of Arne the highliner.
Was he the only one?
you know a lot abiut fishing .Fishing in Dubai
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