Every couple of years, when a
national election is held, I’ve looked at the issues and the candidates involved
and shared some thoughts on how the outcomes might impact marine fisheries and
fisheries management.
Traditionally, fisheries management has been a non-partisan issue, which has had the support of both major parties; that tradition dates back to the passage of the Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976, which was introduced by Rep. Gerry Studds (D-MA) with the strong support of Rep. Don Young (R-AK), both legislators committed to addressing the problems confronting the fishermen and fish stocks of the United States.
The two senators’ non-partisan
efforts were important enough that, even though it was the House’s, rather
than the Senate’s, version of the bill that was ultimately signed into law, the
groundbreaking legislation is now known as the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act. The
last significant reauthorization of the Act took place in the early days of 2007,
when President George W. Bush, a member of the Republican Party who was also an avid
angler and strong advocate of marine conservation, signed the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act in order to further strengthen the law.
Now, as we stand just two days
from a critically important election, in which not only the presidency but also control of both the House and the Senate will probably be decided by a relative
handful of votes cast in an few closely contested jurisdictions, it is time to
ask what the outcome of the 2024 contest might mean for the health of the
nation’s marine fisheries and its living marine resources.
In some ways, that might be hard to know, since neither of the presidential candidates is an active angler, and neither appears to have a close connection to the ocean or the life within.
Donald Trump prefers to be driven around
manicured golf courses in an electric cart, and appears to believe that striking an
inoffensive little ball with a stick, before getting back in the cart to be chauffeured right up to the ball again, the apex of vigorous outdoor activity. Plus, the
guy seems to have an unhealthy aversion to sharks.
Thus, the candidates’ personal
lives provide no clue as to how they might address ocean issues. That being the case, the next logical step
is, perhaps, to look at their respective party platforms, which prove to be almost as
uninformative.
“protecting places that are too special to
develop, like Alaska’s Bristol Bay,“
and
“Going forward, Democrats will…ensure
clean water for all Americans by protecting rivers and wetlands. We’ll protect our oceans by working to designate
new marine sanctuaries, and protect coastal communities from climate
impacts. We’ll keep pushing to fully
fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund, partnering with states and local governments…and
continuing to protect lands and waters as National Monuments.”
That might sound good on its
face, particularly the part about protecting rivers and wetlands, since the loss
and degradation of such rivers and wetlands to dams, unregulated logging, poor
farming practices (particularly draining wetlands, destroying marshes, and
manure and fertilizer runoff), real estate development, industrial pollution
and similar insults has severely harmed runs of diadromous fish, including
striped bass, shad, river herring, American eels, various sturgeon and, in
particular, the five species of Pacific salmon.
But if you’re an angler or
commercial fisherman, there might also be an unperceived threat lying in the Democratic
platform, and its mention of “marine sanctuaries” and “National Monuments,” for
while the laws governing fishing in such areas are very flexible—in some national marine sanctuaries,
such as the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, even bottom trawling is
allowed, while nothing
prohibits anglers from fishing in the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts National
Marine Sanctuary, although commercial fishing is not allowed—there are far
too many members of the environmental community who would turn
large areas of the nearshore ocean into a no-take marine reserves where fishing
of any kind is outlawed. If such voices
gained too much influence in a Democratic administration, fishermen could be
badly hurt, while the benefits to marine resources would not necessarily be any
better than they might receive under active and effective management.
The Republican platform, on the other
hand, doesn’t mention, “fish,” “fishing,” “fisheries,” “ocean,” or “sea” at
all. It is more an assemblage of slogans
than a comprehensive platform; in that respect, the slogan most relevant to the
fishery conservation and management project is probably either
“2. Rein in Wasteful Federal Spending
“Republicans will immediately stabilize
the Economy by slashing wasteful Government spending and promoting Economic
Growth,”
or
“3.
Cut Costly and Burdensome Regulations
“Republicans will reinstate President
Trump’s Deregulation Policies, which saved Americans $11,000 per household, and
end Democrats’ regulatory onslaught that disproportionately harms low- and
middle-income households.”
The
impact of the former platform position can already be seen in the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives, where the majority sought to slash the 2025 budget for
the National Marine Fisheries Service, cutting 11% from its scitence and
management funding, 17% from enforcement, 28.5% from habitat conservation and
55% of the funding needed to protect marine mammals and other endangered
species from various activities, included but not limited to offshore oil
drilling, commercial fishing, and shoreline development. The
report accompanying the overall 2025 budget made it clear that conserving and
managing the nation’s marine resources is not, in the Republicans’ eyes, a national
priority.
The latter platform position,
expressing the party’s hostility to regulation, provides even a clearer threat
to marine resources, as it would further restrict even a diminished NMFS’
ability to regulate harvest, prevent overfishing, and rebuild fish stocks, while
allowing various industrial interests to pollute streams hosting runs of
diadromous fish; divert water critical to such fish to farming, ranching, and similar
business interests; allow the smokestacks of inland polluters to contaminate the
oceans; etc.
And that is not mere speculation,
because perhaps the best way to gauge how either of the candidates, if elected
to the presidency, might impact marine resources is to see what they have done
before.
That’s tough to do with Vice
President Harris, for she was part of a Biden Administration that hardly set
the world on fire when it came to marine conservation.
Since President Biden took
office, he has not urged Congress to take on a single major ocean
initiative. There was no effort to
reauthorize the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, although
the last reauthorization took place almost 20 years ago. About the biggest thing he did in that regard
was to sign onto
the so-called 30x30 initiative, a global conservation effort that originated
well before Pres. Biden took office, and sought to protect 30 percent of the
world’s lands and waters by the year 2023. To promote the effort, the President rolled
out his so-called “American the Beautiful” initiative, but the effort never
really got off the ground.
One could even argue that the National
Marine Fisheries Service took a step backward during the Biden Administration, adopting
fishery management measures in its Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office
that allowed recreational fishermen to chronically exceed their annual catch
limits of scup and black sea bass and, more recently, proposed specifications for the black sea bass fishery that directly contradicted
the clear language of Magnuson-Stevens which requires that fishing limits accord with
scientific advice.
That is hardly responsible stewardship.
Yet thouh some might claim Vice President Harris to be tainted by the Biden Administration’s mantle of mostly benign
neglect of our fisheries by dint of her current office, Trump is stuck with his former
administration’s record of doing active, intentional, and frequent harm.
It began with his cabinet
appointees, the foremost of whom, when it came to putting fish stocks at risk,
was probably Wilbur Ross who, when appointed as Secretary of Commerce at the age of 79, was the oldest
person every appointed to a cabinet position for the first time. As Secretary of Commerce, Ross was in charge
of NMFS, but he seemed to have no concept of modern fisheries science. He had made a successful career out of turning
around bankrupt corporations, and perhaps that made him comfortable with
dealing with depleted resources, for his
first proclamation upon being confirmed was that one of NMFS primary objectives
must be
“obtaining maximum sustainable yield for
our fisheries.”
although he never seemed too concerned about rebuilding overfished stocks to a level that might make that possible. Maintaining abundant fisheries
was his primary concern, as he
declared his intent to reduce American’s reliance on imported seafood, although
just where the domestic seafood that replaced it was to come from was never revealed. Furthermore, he stated that
“Given the enormity of our coastlines, given
the enormity of our freshwater, I would like to how we can become much more
self-sufficient in fishing and perhaps even a net exporter.”
Although Ross never managed to
realize that particular pipe dream, he was able to frustrate at least two
fisheries conservation efforts, involving two very popular recreational species,
soon after becoming Secretary.
The first incident involved the
recreational red snapper season in the Gulf of Mexico. It saw NMFS, under Ross’ guidance, issue a
rule re-opening the private boat season, even though it was clear that anglers
had already made very substantial landings of snapper during the original
season and that NMFS was aware—and freely admitted—that reopening the season
“will necessarily mean that the private
recreational sector will substantially exceed its annual catch limit, which was
designed to prevent overfishing the stock.”
Ross’ NMFS also readily admitted
that
“if employed for a short period of time,
this approach may delay the ultimate rebuilding of the stock by as many as 6
years. This approach likely could not be
continued through time without significantly delaying the rebuilding timeline.”
Yet, given the philosophy of the
past Trump Admimistration, the action was nonetheless justified because,
“Given the precipitous drop in Federal red snapper fishing days for private anglers notwithstanding the growth of the stock, the increasing harm to coastal economies of Gulf States, and that the disparate [state] approaches to management are undermining the very integrity of the management structure, creating ever-increasing uncertainty in the future of the system, the Secretary of Commerce determined that a more modest rebuilding pace for the stock is a risk worth taking.”
It was just another take on the
notion that short-term economic benefits should trump long-term resource
health. It was illegal, and was later subjectto a successful legal challenge, but it was nonetheless symptomatic of an administration
that believed in cutting regulatory burdens in the name of more profitable
business activities.
And it effectively foreshadowed events a month or so later,
after New Jersey decided to defy that Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission, intentionally failed to comply with its summer flounder management
plan, and was then referred to the Secretary of Commerce to suffer the
consequences of its failure to cooperate with the other states on the Summer
Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Management Board.
Secretary Ross had the authority
to find New Jersey out of compliance, and shut down its entire summer flounder
fishery until it decided to conform its rules to the management plan. As things turned out, he
decided to give the state a free pass, without even consulting the people on
his staff who were most familiar with the fishery—the NMFS Regional
Administrator at the Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, and the GARFO
staff.
The Regional Administrator, John
Bullard, was very upset with Ross’ actions, noting that
“the chain of command was broken with this
decision,”
and, because Ross’ action marked
the first time in 25 years that a Secretary of Commerce every reversed an ASMFC
finding of non-compliance, that
“This is a system that keeps all states
accountable to each other. We’re now
going to figure out how to repair that system.”
“wasted no time to petition Ross this week and ask him to put a hold on the new summer flounder regulations approved by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission on Feb. 2.”
So the fi inx favor of New Jersey—and against the summer flounder and the ASMFC—was already in well before the Commission made its noncompliance finding.
Should the election go in Trump’s favor, we
can probably expect another Secretary of Commerce, with the same sort of casual
contempt for the science and the management system, to serve in Trump’s next administration.
And, although the Secretary of
Commerce might have the most direct impact on fisheries issues, other cabinet members can also
play a very significant negative role.
We learned that the hard way in
2017, after Trump
appointed corporate lobbyist and energy company crony Scott Pruit as
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. Personally opposed to the Agency’s mission,
Pruitt set about making the EPA more industry-friendly. In the 17 months that he served as Adminsitrator role—he
eventually resigned after finding himself the target of 14 separate federal
investigations brought by agencies as diverse as the Government Accountability
Office, the White House Office of Management and Budget, and the U.S. Office of
Special Counsel—he managed to either harm or
seriously threaten multiple fish stocks.
In a new Trump Administration, it’s
far from unlikely that a Scott Pruitt think-alike will be the new
Administrator of the EPA.
The Trump Administration finally
halted the Pebble Mine, and hopefully provided the needed protection to the
Bristol Bay watershed, after the Army Corps of Engineers refused to issue the
final permit needed by the mining consortium. But whether that refusal will be enough to finally defeat
the Pebble Mine, or whether the various, seemingly almost random machinations and policy changes that
took place between the time the Obama Administration initially halted the
project and the Corps of Engineers’ final refusal will convince a court that such final refusal was, in truth, “arbitrary and capricious” and thus invalid,
and that such court will allow the mine to proceed, we can’t know at this point.
Either way we shouldn’t believe
that science or good policy had anything to do with the current halt.
Good connections and cronyism did.
“Suddenly, you are seeing a number of Republicans,
including some prominent ones, including some very conservative Republicans,
saying ‘Hold on a moment—maybe Pebble Mine is not a good idea. Maybe you should do whatever you can not to
despoil nature…’”
We probably shouldn't be shocked if new incidents of cronyism pop up in a new Trump administration, and the results of such cronyism might again even prove benign, but if that proves to be the case, we mustn't ignore the affects of accident. For in such a Trump Administration, the concern that “you should do whatever you can not to
despoil nature,” only applies to that part of nature valued by family and influential
members of the Republican Party, not to those parts valued by the rest of us.
If, for example, you were just an
average guy—maybe a tradesman, or a policeman, or a typical nine-to-fiver with
a typical white-collar job, and you liked to fish for striped bass in the
Chesapeake Bay, the Trump EPA was not on your side. The Bay has long been the final dumping place for farm
runoff, industrial runoff, and other pollution originating in the entire
Susquehanna River watershed. The federal government has a legal obligation to abate such pollution.
But the last Trump Administration refused to take any action to reduce
the pollutant load coming into the Chesapeake’s waters, particularly that
originating on Pennsylvania farms.
It took two different lawsuits, and an eventual legal settlement, to compel
the Trump EPA to do its job.
Now that the striped bass stock
has fallen on hard times, cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay, and minimizing the
size of its hypoxic "dead zone," can only become more important. But, based on what happened the last time, any assumption that a Trump Administration’s Environmental
Protection Agency will take any action at all to protect the environment of the Chesapeake Bay will
almost certainly prove to be false, and it will probably take another substantial legal effort to get it to provide any help.
It even turned out, the last time around, that the Trump-era EPA didn’t have to go near the water to hurt marine fish, fishermen,
and fish consumers. In the spring of 2020, when Trump’s EPA Administrator was Andrew Wheeler, a
former lobbyist for the coal industry, Wheeler gutted an existing regulation that limited the amount of mercury
that could be expelled from the smokestacks of coal-fed power plants.
Realizing that corporate profits are not a bit less important than people's health, he claimed
that
“We have put in place an honest accounting
method that balances the cost to utilities with public safety”
because a former coal industry lobbyist
would certainly never want that balance skewed in favor of the public’s health…
“is the burning of fossil fuels,
especially coal, which releases 160 tons of mercury into the air in the United
States alone. From there, rainfall
washes the mercury into the ocean…
“…High-sulfur (‘dirty’) coal tends to be
high in mercury as well…bacteria sulfur in biochemical reactions that
eventually convert the mercury into methylmercury, the highly toxic form that
accumulates to deadly levels as it passes up the food chain.”
And, if anyone has any doubts,
that “deadly” can refer to people, as well as unborn infants, and not just to
the rest of the animal kingdom.
EPA
regulations were actually beginning to drive down methylmercury levels in
bluefin tuna, but Trump’s EPA then did what it could to make tuna fish toxic
again.
But all of those things were done
by Trump’s cabinet members, not by Trump himself.
So is there really anything that
suggests that Trump himself would be hostile to good fisheries conservation and
management? There is, in the
form of an “Executive
Order on Promoting American Seafood Competitiveness and Economic Growth,” which
was issued on May 7, 2020.
Some of that Executive Order was
actually beneficial to American fisheries, such as the section that sought to
combat illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, and the section that
sought to create a global seafood trade strategy. As for the rest, it certainly didn’t bring
conservation to the forefront.
Instead, the Executive Order included a directive that each regional fishery management council must produce
“a prioritized list of recommended actions
to reduce burdens on domestic fishing and increase production within
sustainable fisheries,”
a directive that seems to come
right out of the deregulation playbook—and I challenge anyone to name a single
fish stock that became healthier after deregulation. Anglers and conservationists were rightfully concerned that Trump’s Commerce
Department issued a press release making it clear that the Executive Order was
intended to be an example of
“Regulatory reform to maximize commercial
fishing [emphasis added]”
that did not consider the
recreational sector.
“There is the potential for NOAA Fisheries
to interpret this order as encouraging increased use of commercial fishing
gears such as longlines, gill nets, and trawls, which would be a tremendous
step backwards for conservation.”
The Trump Administration was
voted out of office just six months after the Executive Order was issued, so there
probably wasn’t enough time to put its most egregious goals into place. However, there is no reason to believe that a
new Trump Administration wouldn’t begin where the old one left off, and attempt
to deregulate commercial fisheries in an effort to increase production,
regardless of such action’s impacts on fish stocks.
And, finally, before leaving
Trump behind, let’s not forget his aversion to sharks.
It’s hard to know what effect that aversion had on his administration’s policies, but it’s reasonable to wonder whether it affected the United States’ position at the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, which also regulates sharks, swordfish, and billfish in addition to its namesake pelagics.
While it’s impossible to say that
Trump’s fear of sharks had anything to do with the U.S. stance on shortfin
makos at ICCAT,
it’s equally impossible not to note that the United States reversed its
position, and made mako conservation possible, at the very next ICCAT meeting
following President Biden’s inauguration.
And that’s probably as good a way
as any to summarize Trump’s effects on marine fisheries issues.
So when the election occurs
tomorrow, voters are getting a clear choice, between two very different
candidates.
Some voters will make the
perceived threat of crime, or of inflation, or of immigration issues, their
primary concern, and vote accordingly.
Some will worry about issues
impacting our foreign alliances, healthcare choice, and/or education standards,
and cast their votes based on those.
But for those who will let a
candidate’s impact on the health of the nation’s marine resources at least
partially influence where their votes will go, I hope that the above summary of
the candidates’ histories and party platforms might have provided at least a
small nudge in the proper direction.
.
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