Preserve New England's 400-Year Industry and Bring an End to Overfishing
Preserve New England's 400-Year Industry and Bring an End to Overfishing
Why this petition matters
http://actionnetwork.org/campaign/groundfish_amendment16
Preserve New England's 400-Year Industry and Bring an End to Overfishing
New England's groundfish fishery has driven the region's economy and culture for centuries. But today it is in serious trouble. Decades of overfishing and mismanagement have led to severe declines in fish populations, continued restrictions on fishing effort, decreases in revenue, and the loss of our traditional fishing fleet.
Please show your support for this historic fishery and express your desire to end overfishing.
With the support of forward-thinking commercial fishing organizations, the New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) is developing a new approach called sectors to replace the current failed fishery management system. Sectors are community-based, fishermen run co-ops. Sectors follow three simple guidelines:
They implement science-based catch limits to promote rebuilding of fish populations and prevent overfishing;
They incorporate monitoring so fishermen and regulators know exactly how much is being caught so that fishing stops once catch limits have been reached; and
They are allocated their own share of the annual catch limit; while respecting catch limits, sectors provide fishermen with the flexibility to set their own fishing guidelines so they can run their businesses more efficiently and profitably.
On June 23-25, federal fisheries managers will vote on adopting sector management and annual catch limits for the groundfish fishery.
Thank you for your help.
Peter Baker
Manager, New England Fisheries Campaign
Pew Environment Group
Send a letter to the following decision maker(s):
Regional Administrator Patricia Kurkul
Below is the sample letter:
Subject: Groundfish Amendment 16
Dear [decision maker name automatically inserted here],
I am writing to ask you and your agency to take immediate action to end overfishing and help restore New England's historic groundfish fishery. Groundfish stocks have been undergoing fishing for decades, with overall groundfish abundance at only one-third the level needed to support healthy and sustainable populations.
By implementing sector management, the NMFS and NEFMC can take an important step to successfully end and prevent overfishing in New England and rebuild depleted groundfish populations. However, for this new management system to work, it will require that all vessels, whether participating in a sector or not, adhere to the same rules on how much fish can be sustainably taken from the ocean.
I strongly recommend that the following measures be adopted and implemented across the entire groundfish fleet by 2010:
1. Science-based annual catch limits on all managed fish stocks
2. Strong accountability measures that ensure fishing ceases once limits are reached and that correct overages if they occur
3. A comprehensive monitoring and reporting system that provides accurate estimates on all fish caught (landings and discards of all species)
Full implementation of these measures will not only bring groundfish management into compliance with the new requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens Act but will also help create a fair and level playing field for all groundfish fishermen.
You and the Council have worked tirelessly to develop effective sector management in the New England groundfish fishery. I hope you will protect the investments of sector members and strengthen their ability to work together by ensuring all the above measures are adopted for all groundfish vessels by 2010.
Sincerely,