Bottom fishermen throughout eastern Florida felt growing
excitement as Memorial Day weekend approached, and the state’s anticipated
39-day South Atlantic red snapper season.
For well over a decade, there had been few opportunities for
anglers to target red snapper. The fish
were abundant and willing to bite, and It turned out that was a problem,
because recreational fishermen kept catching, and unintentionally killing, red
snapper while fishing for other species, even when the red snapper season was
closed. Things got so bad that, out
of the 509,000-fish annual catch limit, 475,000 were allocated to dead discards
(almost all of which were generated by anglers), while just 22,797 were set
aside for anglers to keep and take home, with the remainder allocated to the
commercial fishery.
Because they never managed to get their dead discards under
control, the recreational red snapper season could only be open for one or two
days. Any longer, and overfishing would
be the result.
Thus, the recreational fishing industry and the anglers’
rights community tried to win themselves an extended fishing season, and larger
red snapper landings—even at the price of increased fishing mortality—by convincing
state and federal regulators that the National Marine Fisheries Service should
issue exempted fishing permits to the states, ostensibly to test new approaches
to data collection, which would also allow anglers to ignore the annual red snapper
catch limit, fish for an extended period, and bring more red snapper home.
Those
permits were issued on May 1. On May 5, members of the commercial fishing
industry filed a legal action seeking to enjoin the operation of the permits,
arguing that recreational fishing pursuant to the permits would cause the South
Atlantic red snapper stock to be overfished, causing harm to those members of
the commercial fishing industry who also harvest red snapper. On
May 21, just hours before Florida’s expanded recreational season for South
Atlantic red snapper was to open, a judge sitting on the Federal District Court
for the District of Columbia issued a preliminary injunction which halted fishing
activity pursuant to the exempted fishing permits until the matter can be
decided on its merits.
The injunction enraged many of the anglers hoping to fish
the next day, along with charter boat operators who suffered last-minute
cancellations not only for the scheduled opening day of the season, but for the
month that followed. Florida Governor
Ron DeSantis was particularly vocal, saying
Elsewhere
on the Internet, we saw anglers blame the judge, commercial fishermen,
commercial fish dealers, and NOAA Fisheries. One
unhappy angler made the remarkable statement that
“The federal government nor the state government have a
lawful right to restrict the gathering of food in state or federal water of
individual citizens of the United States.”
However, he provided no legal citations to support his position,
and a quick check of his profile confirmed that he was not an attorney, but
rather the head of a company that earned its profits by cutting down trees, so his
views on legal issues probably ought to be taken with at least one grain of
salt.
Yet the question remains:
Who bears the real onus for any harm done by the eleventh-hour closure
of Florida’s recreational season for South Atlantic red snapper?
A thoughtful look at the issue reveals that the true source
of the damage isn’t who or what most anglers think.
Let’s look first at the judge’s decision granting the
preliminary injunction.
“Through fair and impartial judgments, the federal courts interpret
and apply the law to resolve disputes.
The courts do not enact the laws, that is the responsibility of Congress…The
judicial branch…has the authority to decide the constitutionality of federal
laws and resolve other disputes over federal laws.”
The judge’s responsibility in Southeast Fisheries
Association v. Lutnick—the suit challenging the South Atlantic red snapper
exempted fishing permits—was thus to “interpret and apply” the law governing
the issues raised by the parties, and to “resolve [their] disputes over federal
law.
The federal laws in question in the action were the
Administrative Procedures Act, which governs agency action and the judicial
review thereof, and the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, which among many
other things, directed the Secretary of Commerce to
“promulgate regulations that create an expedited, uniform, and
regionally-based process to promote issuance, where practicable, of experimental
[not “exempted”] fishing permits.
[emphasis added].”
Magnuson-Stevens also includes a congressional finding that
“a national program for the conservation and management of
the fishery resources of the United States is necessary to prevent
overfishing, [emphasis added]”
requires that
“Conservation and management measures shall prevent
overfishing, [emphasis added]”
states that every fishery management plan shall
“contain the conservation and management measures, applicable
to foreign fishing and fishing by vessels of the United States, which are
necessary and appropriate for the conservation and management of the fishery to
prevent overfishing.
[emphasis added, formatting omitted]”
Another provision of Magnuson-Stevens requires regional
fishery management councils, in each fishery management plan that they approve,
to
“establish a mechanism for specifying annual catch limits in
the plan (including a multiyear plan), implementing regulations, of annual
specifications, at a level such that overfishing does not occur in
the fishery, including measures to ensure accountability. [emphasis added]”
Preventing or ending overfishing is mentioned in various
other provisions of the law. In passing
Magnuson-Stevens, Congress established a very clear policy that overfishing was
not to be tolerated in the fisheries of the United States.
So the question for the judge was whether the National
Marine Fisheries Service could issue exempted fishing permits, under the experimental
fishing permit provision, that might upend that policy against overfishing and
allow overfishing to occur so long as the exempted fishing permit was in force.
“that specifies the annual catch limit and accountability
measures applicable to the recreational harvest of red snapper.”
“there is nothing in the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA) that dictates
an EFP’s harvest be included in annual catch limits.”
The plaintiffs, however, disagreed, and argued that
“The factual record establishes that under the challenged
permits, red snapper landings in 2026 will substantially exceed the stock’s
annual catch limit. The record also
establishes that under the challenged permits, fishing mortality in 2026 will
be so high as to cause overfishing on South Atlantic red snapper…
“Preventing overfishing, managing stocks under annual catch
limits, and ensuring fair and equitable allocations are core requirements of
the Manguson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act…
“The Magnuson-Stevens Act nowhere allows Defendents to waive
the statutory requirements for annual catch limit management, preventing
overfishing, and fair and equitable allocations—whether through the use of ‘exempted
fishing permits’ or otherwise.
[numbering omitted]”
Judge Rudolph Contreras’ job—his only job—was to apply the
law to the undisputed facts in the case, and decide which side should prevail.
On May 21, he handed down his decision.
In that decision, he noted that
“Traditional tools of statutory analysis show that any EFPs the
NMFS issues must comply with the [Magnuson-Stevens Act]. The MSA created a [c]ooperative research and
management program…to address needs identified under [Chapter 38 of Title 16 of
the United States Code and any other marine resource laws enforced by the
Secretary [of Commerce]. Chapter 38,
titled ‘Fishery Conservation and Management,’ identifies several such needs,
one of which includes placing fishery resources ‘under sound management’ ‘before
overfishing [causes] irreversible effects.’
It also identifies another need: [t]he collection of reliable data’ for ‘the
effective conservation, management, and scientific understanding of the fishery
resources of the United States.’ In
turn, Section 1867(d) of the MSA authorizes the Secretary to issue ‘experimental
permit[s].’ Under 50 C.F.R. [section]
600.745(b), the Secretary promulgated such a process. Under that process, the NMFS may issue EFPs ‘for
limited testing, public display, data collection, exploratory fishing,
compensation fishing, conservation engineering, health and safety surveys, environmental
cleanup, and/or hazard removal purposes,’ if a target or incidental harvest of
a species managed under a fishery management plan or fishery regulations is
prohibited (e.g., South Atlantic red snapper).
“Therefore, at a minimum, each EFP the agency issues—including
data collection projects—must ‘address’ (i.e., ‘to give attention to or deal
with a matter or problem’) the ‘needs’ (i.e., ‘necessary dut[ies] or obligation[s]’)
Congress identified within Chapter 38, several of which emphasize the need to
prevent overfishing. This is evident
from the plain language of the statutes concerning EFPs, their titles, and
their place within the overall statutory scheme.
“It is also consistent with the NMFS longstanding practice
and understanding of EFPs. When Congress
amended MSA to create a ‘[c]ooperative research and management program,’ and
directed the Secretary to create an ‘[e]xperimental fishing permitting process,’
the NMFS explained that ‘[a]ny permit issued by NMFS is a Federal action, and
as such must comply with any and all applicable laws…’
“…[A]s Amicus Curiae notes, in a prior EFP concerning red
snapper, the NMFS has explicitly stated that this permit ‘does not exempt’
participants from the requirements of the MSA, including the requirement under
16 U.S.C. 1883(d), which prohibits the harvest of red snapper for the remainder
of the fishing year if the red snapper recreational quota is met, even if the
EFP participants have allocation remaining.
Therefore, in addition to the relevant statutes, the Government’ [sic]
own practices indicate that EFPs must be consistent with the requirements of
the MSA…
“Because Section 1867 requires EFPs to be consistent with the
MSA, as explained above, the NFMSA [sic] must consider whether granting an EFP
application would lead to overfishing or implicate other conservation
concerns. The regulations governing EFPs
require the NMFD to do the same.
Plaintiffs, however, contend that the Government granted the States’ EFP
applications without grappling with evidence that the EFPs would lead to
overfishing. The Court agrees, the
Government ‘failed to consider an important aspect of the problem’ and thus ‘offered
an explanation for its decision that runs counter to evidence before the
agency.’
“In February 2026, the Government placed a notice on the
Federal Register that it had received, and was considering, the States’ four
exempted fishing permit applications. In
response to the notice, the Government received public comments, some of which
expressed significant concern with the EFP applications…
“…[C]ommenters argued that the proposed EFPs would undermine
existing federal protections for South Atlantic red snapper by allowing
substantially more fish to be taken than current limits permit. According to the commenters, the existing catch
limits and overfishing thresholds are based on the amount of fishing-related
mortality the stock can sustain and already reflect current fishing
levels. The commenters further argued
that, whereas the recreational red snapper season had recently lasted only one
to three days, the EFPs would extend the season to as many as 39 days in
Florida and 62 days in the other states, thereby substantially increasing
fishing mortality. Thus, the commenters
contended that the existing limits do not account for such dramatically
expanded recreational seasons and would likely result in overfishing…
“Furthermore, the NMFS granted the States’ EFP applications,
despite the applications being incomplete.
The regulations require ‘an applicant for an EFP to submit a completed
application to the appropriate Regional Administrator or Director,’ and the ‘application
package must include…[t]he species (target and incidental) expected to be
harvested under the EFP, [and] the amount(s) of such harvest necessary to
conduct the exempted fishing.’ And ‘[a]n
incomplete application…will not be considered until corrected in writing.’ Despite this requirement, the NMFS granted
the incomplete applications.
“The NMFS initially recognized this deficiency and requested
that the applicants ‘throw out a number,’ for consideration, but Florida, for
instance, refused, stating that ‘the EFP is not predicated on a number of fish,
and for [NMFS] to request a number—even an estimated number—is inappropriate
and unnecessary. The other States also
refused, some expressing concern that any harvest number would be used to
shorten the season…
“But the agency’s own regulations require applicants to
provide this information and an application without it ‘will not be considered.’ It is ‘axiomatic…that an agency is bound by
its own regulations.’…So, if an ‘agency fails to comply with its own
regulations,’ the relevant action ‘may be set aside as arbitrary and
capricious.’ By granting the
applications without the inclusion of harvest estimates, as required under the
regulations, the Government acted arbitrarily and capriciously.
“Finally, while the Court agrees with the Government that
Congress, through Section 1867(d), authorized the NMFS to ‘create an expedited,
uniform, and regionally-based process to promote issuance, when practicable, of
experimental fishing permits,’ the Court does not find that Congress gave
the Government unbridled discretion to circumvent MSA and the fishery
management plan framework through the EFP process. ‘Congress does not alter the fundamental details
of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary provisions—it does not, one
might say, hide elephants in mouseholes.
And it is more than a little doubtful that Congress would have tucked
into the particular mousehole of [Section 1867(b)] an elephant that tramples
the work done by [the MSA and the fishery management plans].’ As Amicus Curiae aptly observes, ‘nothing
in [Section 1867(b)]…give[s] the [NMFS] general authority to exempt fishing
activities from any legal requirements…let alone indicate[s] that Congress
meant for [EFPs] to become a vehicle to deregulate fisheries.’…As
explained above, EFPs must ‘address’ the ‘needs’ identified under the MSA—not
provide an escape hatch from them. Such
needs include the overarching requirement that fisheries be managed to prevent
and end overfishing. [emphasis
added, citations omitted]”
The decision appears well-reasoned, and seems to proceed
logically from well-established law. The
Court was confronted with what appears to be an illegal agency action, which violates
both the letter and the spirit of Magnuson-Stevens, and the agency’s own
regulations as well. In such an event,
the preliminary injunction, although always issued at the discretion of the court,
is a very appropriate remedy.
But the analysis of why the Plaintiffs prevailed shouldn’t
stop there.
While the
Exempted Fishing Permits were supposedly issued
“to pilot test state data collection and management
strategies,”
the words of the EFP proponents themselves make it clear
that the state EFP proposals were all about anglers being able to harvest more
red snapper, and that testing new approaches to recreational data collection was,
at best, a secondary consideration.
“The South Atlantic states are charting their own
course. For too long, federal management
kept anglers tied to the dock, while a thriving red snapper
population swam just outside reach.
“Frustrated red snapper anglers have waited a long time to
see a light at the end of the tunnel and this week they got the news they’ve
been waiting to hear. All four South
Atlantic states submitted exempted fishing permit applications yesterday to
the U.S. Secretary of Commerce to
commence state management of South Atlantic red snapper.
“’If you look at what has happened to Atlantic red snapper in
the last four years—two days for recreational red snapper in 2022. Two days in 2023. One day in 2024. Two days in 2025. This is not acceptable,’ Florida Gov.
Ron DeSantis said in a press conference on Monday in Fernandina Beach,
Fla. ‘The problem is the states have not
been given the responsibility to manage Atlantic red snapper…’
“South Atlantic red snapper is presently managed by NOAA
through the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council. The fishery has come under intense scrutiny
in recent years as recreational fishing seasons have been limited to one
or two days—and often closed entirely—despite the population being
larger than any person alive has ever seen.
Draconian federal restrictions arise from high levels of uncertainty in
recreational catch data collected by the federal government.
“The exempted fishing permits…from North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, and Florida outline state-based methodologies for improving
recreational data and harvest access while still providing
necessary conservation… [emphasis added]”
Yes, recreational data collection is mentioned, but the
thrust of the comments are not improving the data, but increasing the
recreational season, so that anglers are no longer “kept…tied to the dock.”
Supporting comments quoted in the press release continue the
theme.
Jeff Angers, president of the Center for Sportfishing
Policy, complained that
“The South Atlantic has long been trapped in a broken federal
bureaucratic system that limits opportunity to access a plentiful public
resource. [emphasis added]”
He didn’t mention data collection at all.
The American Sportfishing Association’s Martha Guyas did mention
data, but only in a secondary way, saying
“ASA is incredibly thankful to the South Atlantic states for
recognizing the importance of the red snapper fishery to anglers, coastal
communities, and the economy of our region…The proposed EFPs are a
critical step in not only restoring recreational harvest opportunities
but also advancing much needed data collection improvements that can inform
better management moving forward.
[emphasis added]”
The wolf-in-sheep’s-clothing nature of the EFP applications
becomes even more evident in the language used by the South Atlantic
states. A
letter from the executive director of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission to the Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, provides the best
example, which noted that
“On November 10, 2025, FWC formally submitted Florida’s South
Atlantic Red Snapper EFP that, upon approval, will allow for a 39-day season
for Red Snapper in the South Atlantic, a clear improvement from the two-day
federal season in 2025.”
Note what the letter does not say; it doesn’t
say that the EFP, if granted, “will allow Florida to test a new data collection
methodology.” It says that the EFP “will
allow for a 39-day season,” because that was the primary reason the EFP was
being requested. Testing improved data collection
methods was only an excuse—an effort to cloak the state’s goal of killing more
red snapper in an arguably more attractive disguise.
The letter goes on a bit later, telling Secretary Lutnick
that,
“Given the social, economic, and cultural importance of
recreational fishing in Florida, we greatly appreciate your leadership in
seeing Florida’s application through to approval so Floridians can enjoy
their God-given rights to recreate, and enjoy, our natural resources. [emphasis in original]”
Still no mention of improving data collection. Later on in the letter, as noted above, the
Florida FWC argues that nothing in Magnuson-Stevens “dictates” that fish caught
under an exempted fishing permit be “included in annual catch limits,” then
argues that Florida should not be required to estimate the number of red
snapper that will be killed pursuant to the EFP, because
“The Florida EFP limits harvest by number of fishing days and
other fishery management tools, e.g. bag and aggregate bag limits.”
There would be no hard cap on the total number of red
snapper killed.
Then, although the use of EFPs in the Gulf of Mexico red
snapper fishery was frequently cited favorably by proponents of South Atlantic
EFPs, Florida made it clear that it didn’t intend to adhere closely to the Gulf
approach, because
“In the South Atlantic, dead discards are directly taken ‘off
the top’ of the Red Snapper [annual catch limit], reducing allowable recreational
harvest from 365,404 fish to 22,797 fish. In the Gulf of America, discards are
not ‘taken off the top,’ providing significantly more harvest
opportunities…Simply put, if Florida was to base our response on a ‘quota’,
state-led management would be near impossible.
[emphasis added]”
And since the whole point of the Florida exempted fishing
permit was to provide “significantly more harvest opportunities,” and escape
the science-based annual catch limits imposed by NMFS, not being held to a quota
of any kind was of prime importance.
Eventually, Florida’s letter did get around to mentioning
data collection, first to complain that
“much of NOAA’s response [to the initial application for an
exempted fishing permit] appears to potentially delay action under the
guise of ‘data’ collection, [emphasis in original]”
and then to whine that
“based on…the continued reference to ‘data collection and research’
it is clear that NOAA’s initial review is not from the lens of flexibility.”
The Florida letter eventually criticized the federal data
collection program and praised Florida’s counterpart, finally stating that the “primary
impetus” behind the EFPs was
“to generate improved, regionally consistent information necessary
to better quantify recreational fishing effort and discards for Red Snapper
throughout the South Atlantic,”
before getting back to discussing
“The low recreational catch limit of 22,797 fish.”
That sort of language emphasizing longer seasons and higher
landings, from both the EFP proponents and from the states, provides more than
adequate reason to believe that the primary purpose of the EFPs was to create a
mechanism that would allow recreational fishermen to exceed the annual South
Atlantic red snapper catch limit with impunity.
And it was those states and EFP proponents who pulled the
political levers necessary to convince—or, perhaps more accurately, compel—NMFS
to issue the EFPs. And it was those
states and EFP proponents who are ultimately responsible for the chaos and any
economic harm that followed the Court’s issuance of an injunction.
For as Judge Contreras determined, “EFPs must ‘address’ the ‘needs’
identified under the MSA—not provide an escape hatch from them.”
Since the South Atlantic red snapper EFPs did not address
such needs, but were merely a ploy to allow anglers to overfish, they were
illegal and thus were enjoined.
Those who initially supported the illegal EFPs now express
outrage.
They should be expressing embarrassment instead.