| Lockout Has Anglers Reeling
January 2003 Issue of Boat U.S., Volume VIII By Ryck Lydecker 703-461-2845 Boat Owners Association of the United States: "535,000 members" 880 South Pickett Street Alexandria, VA 22304 703-823-9550 Fax: 703-461-2847 To submit a Letter to the Editor: LettersToEditor@boatus.com After waiting with bated breath for over a year for a decision on new fishing restrictions around the Channel Islands, California anglers got "knocked flat" when the state fish and game commission voted to close 175 square miles of ocean to all fishing, effective as of Jan. 1. If regulators follow suit next year in adjacent federal waters, the area closed to fishing could swell to over 425 square miles. In a 2-1 vote last Oct. 23, the commission approved a checkerboard of 11 closed areas that, according to Tom Raftican, president of United Anglers of Southern California, locks up more than 25% of the best fishing waters around the five islands off Santa Barbara. Even catch- and- release fishing is prohibited in these areas and Raftican points to "extreme environmentalists" with a no-compromise agenda for the drive to close more coastal waters in California and elsewhere. "Fishermen in other states had better take notice because they are next," Raftican warns. "We're just the first domino to fall." Indeed similar management plans that include total closures, to preserve fish stocks and protect habitat, are in the talking stages in Oregon, Massachusetts and Florida. But in the Channel Islands case, two years of non-stop talking -- with all sides represented in a formal consensus-building process -- fell apart at the 11th hour, throwing the decision back to the commission. "We were at the table for two years as part of an 18 member Marine Reserve Working Group," Raftican says. "Our job was to reach consensus on management measures, including closures, that would help stocks of overfished species to recover." In California the designation Marine Reserve means that all types of fishing are banned. Raftican's group has supported reserves in some cases within the state waters where closures can be supported by scientific evidence, he says. And by the end of the Channel Islands process, anglers had agreed to a plan setting aside what they thought was a reasonable portion of the state and federal waters that compromise the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. "It was tough but we believed we had arrived at an agreement all sides could live with," Raftican says. "Anglers had agreed to closing just over 17% of sanctuary waters but on the last morning of the working group process, things fell apart. "One of the environmental representatives showed up with a whole new map that called for closing over 30% of the area," Raftican continues. "He wouldn't budge and that killed any hope of reaching consensus." As a result of that maneuver, in May 2001, the Marine Reserve Working Group disbanded and the California Fish and Game Commission had to settle the matter. In the intervening 15 months the commission's staff developed several alternative plans which it put out for public comment. An economic impact study commissioned by the American Sportfishing Association determined that the closures could cost as much as $50 million annually in lost angler spending. Nonetheless, the "preferred alternative" which closes some 25% of sanctuary waters, is what passed and that includes some of the best fishing areas off southern California, Raftican maintains. Even more troubling than the decision, he says, is that the five-member Fish and Wildlife Commission voted with only three members present. The two missing commissioners -- one called away on business and the other out sick -- are appointed as sportfishing representatives and that only added to angler frustration. "The most important vote of the last decade and they couldn't make it," Raftican observes. "Yet 300 anglers could take time off work to attend the meeting." The association bused in fishermen-all wearing red tee shirts--for the Santa Barbara meeting, much as it had done earlier in the year to demonstrate opposition to wide spread closures then being proposed for inshore state waters all along the coast (see "Anglers Debone No-Take Zone," BoatU.S. Magazine, July 2002). But in that case, anglers and other "stakeholders" felt they had been left out of discussions from the beginning and the Commission agreed to start fresh with a whole new collaborative process that now includes all sides. In the Channel Islands decisions, however, it appears the only option open to the anglers is legal action, perhaps a lawsuit contesting the voting procedure. At press time, Raftican said his organization had not yet decided on a course of action. The increasingly contentious issue of marine protected areas like California's will be the subject of a national meeting next month. RecFishII, the second marine recreational fishing symposium to be sponsored by the National Marine Fisheries Service, will provide a forum for anglers, scientists and fishery managers to discuss Marine Protected Areas as tools in fishery management. The symposium will be held Feb. 23-26 in St. Petersburg Beach, Florida. For more information, contact eangler@baotus.com or write: RecFish II, National Marine Fisheries Service, SSMC3, Room 14752, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910
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