PDA

View Full Version : Menhaden Fleet Gets 3 Year Extension



Kevin Smith
11-05-2009, 04:44 PM
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, NOVEMBER 4, 2009
PRESS CONTACT, TINA BERGER, 202/289-6400


ASMFC Atlantic Menhaden Board Approves Addendum to Extend Menhaden Reduction Fishery Cap for 3 Years

Newport, Rhode Island - The Commission's Atlantic Menhaden Management Board approved Addendum IV to Amendment 1 to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic Menhaden. Addendum IV extends the Chesapeake Bay reduction fishery harvest cap, established through Addendum III, for an additional three years (2011 - 2013). Under the Addendum, the Board will annually review measures to determine if they are appropriate given the most recent information available about the stock and fishery. At any future meeting, the Board can initiate development of additional or alternative management measures.

The Board's action was requested by the Commonwealth of Virginia in order to accommodate its legislative process as well as ensure that the current management program is extended while menhaden research efforts continue. Virginia's legislature, which convenes in January each year, is responsible for regulating the menhaden reduction fishery in state waters. With Addendum IV in place this year, Virginia state administrators can work with the legislature in early 2010 to amend Virginia law to extend the harvest cap without the current cap expiring.

Addendum III established the current annual cap of 109,020 metric tons on reduction fishery harvests in Chesapeake Bay as a precautionary measure while research was conducted to address the question of menhaden abundance in the Bay. The cap was first instituted in 2006 to extend through 2010. With adoption of Addendum IV that cap will be extended through 2013 with the following provisions. Harvest for reduction purposes is prohibited in Chesapeake Bay when 100% of the cap is landed. Over-harvest in any given year will be deducted from the next year’s quota. Under-harvest in one year will be credited only to the following year’s cap, not to exceed 122,740 metric tons. Since 2006, reduction landings of menhaden from Chesapeake Bay have not exceeded the cap of 109,020 metric tons.

A copy of Addendum IV will be available via the Commission's website at Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission under Breaking News by November 13, 2009. For more information, please contact Braddock Spear, Senior FMP Coordinator for Policy, at (202) 289-6400 or bspear@asmfc.org.

Sorry to see this happening.

Kevin
Weekend Mistress

p-2
11-06-2009, 01:57 PM
I heard a few weeks ago Omega got busted for dumping the effluent from their reduction process. Supposedly they used their boats to haul it down to the mouth of the Bay and pumped it out there. The obvious smell gave them away and now the EPA is investigating this incident. I'm hearing about this from environmental lawyers, not fishermen so I don't know what to believe.
Has anyone else heard about this?

WhiteStoneBridge
11-06-2009, 02:27 PM
Here's where they got busted back in 2007:

Regulators seek beefier fine on fish processor | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com (http://hamptonroads.com/node/326211)


I'm among the first to bash Omega on these boards. But to say they have been taking the effluent and pumping it on their boats to be released down the Bay sounds a little far fetched to me. This is how internet rumors get started. Let's give them the benefit of the doubt here.