Elections always have
consequences, and for those who care about the health of the nation’s marine
fisheries, and the quality and adequacy of federal fishery management programs,
the consequences of the 2022 elections for the House of Representatives have
not been good.
The ideology behind the cuts to
NMFS’ budget were clearly set out in
the House Report on the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies
Appropriations Act, which starts off, in part,
“To reduce the size of the Federal
Government and ensure that agencies funded herein are focused on missions that
serve the American people without wasting and abusing hard-earned tax dollars,
this bill prioritizes funding for critical agencies, including the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Science Foundation, Bureau of
Prisons and Drug Enforcement Administration, while freezing, reducing, or eliminating
funding for non-essential activities…
“To support investments in Federal
priorities such as national security, law enforcement in our communities, and
administering just detention and correctional systems, the bill right-sizes
agencies and programs by scaling back unsustainable spending levels to fiscal
year 2022 levels, or lower, and cutting programs that have become agency slush
funds and social justice initiatives…”
It continues that way for several
more paragraphs, each making it clear that maintaining healthy and sustainable
fisheries, restoring degraded fish habitat, and enforcing fisheries laws are
not among the priorities of the majority party, and that both recreational and
commercial fishermen are not seen as important constituencies by those who
prepared either the draft budget or the report.
And, of course, the word “conservation”
seldom appears in the report, except as a reference to an already-existing program
or statute.
But that doesn’t mean that
recreational fishermen are completely left out of the House report or the House
allocation process. In a few instances,
where anglers are trying to kill more fish than the current science allows, or seek to undercut the federal fishery management process, the House majority is more
than willing to support them.
Hopefully to no one’s surprise,
all such efforts focus on the South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico, where
organized anglers have long tried to undermine or completely replace federal
management of recreational fisheries; in a similar vein, much of the
recreationally-oriented allocations affect the red snapper fishery. If you fish in New England, the Mid-Atlantic,
or anywhere in the Pacific Ocean or Caribbean Sea, the House majority
essentially treats you as if you didn’t exist, but the whiners in the Gulf and
South Atlantic, who are also politically astute and are willing to pay the
asking price to “gain access” to key legislators, are getting their share of
attention.
Thus, the same House majority
that was more than willing to cut $14 million from law enforcement, and cut
another $16 million from habitat restoration and conservation, presumably
because such things are not priority issues and so are deemed “non-essential
activities,” decided that it was appropriate to spend another $5 million to “validate”
the results of the so-called “Great Red Snapper Count” in the Gulf of Mexico,
because
“Greater inclusion of
fisheries-independent estimates of reef fish like Red Snapper can be used to
help both State-based management initiatives as well as objectively resolve
discrepancies between Federal management agencies and concerned stakeholders.”
Another $3.5 million was
appropriated to survey reef fish off the East Coast of Florida, because
“The Committee recognizes concerns by the
State of Florida regarding the incomplete data assessment concerning reef fish
located off the waters of Florida’s Atlantic coast, including the Florida Keys.”
But the really big allocation was the $30 million—equal to the cuts to the law enforcement and habitat budgets combined—appropriated
“for NMFS to assist each of the States
within the South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Councils that
wish to develop or improve State recreational harvest collection programs to supplement,
or if the State chooses, supplant, the [federal] Marine Recreational
Information Program…These efforts shall be a top priority for [NMFS]… [emphasis added]”
The fact that the House majority
is calling what would once have been considered a pork barrel program to
benefit anglers in a handful of states “a top priority” while cutting funding
from enforcement and habitat restoration budgets probably says all that one
needs to know about how much it values marine conservation efforts.
At
this point, it is probably important to note that the Senate appropriation was
a very bipartisan effort, that was supported by 26 out of the 29 senators who cast
a vote on the appropriations bill.
That stands in stark contrast to the ideologically extreme appropriations
bill forced through by the House majority.
Instead of the House majority’s
shrill, self-serving rhetoric about reducing the size of government, the
alleged misuse of taxpayer dollars, agency slush funds, etc., the bipartisan
Senate report recognizes the importance of federal agencies that are, among
other things,
“properly managing our Nation’s
fisheries, [emphasis added]
and engaging in
“activities critical to our Nation’s
well-being, including…fisheries management.”
Such language makes it clear that
the Senate appropriators, unlike those of the House majority, do not consider
NMFS’ duties to be “non-essential activities.”
In a similar way, the Senate
report recognizes the importance of marine conservation, as well as the
importance of commercial and recreational fishing activities on every coast of
the United States, and not merely in the southeastern states. Thus, instead of taking the House majority’s
approach, and appropriating around $40 million for the Gulf and South Atlantic,
and letting fishermen elsewhere starve, the Senate bill includes provisions for
fisheries, and protected species, on every coast, including $8.5 million for
Atlantic salmon restoration efforts, $80 million for Pacific salmon conservation
and management (including $7 million for habitat conservation), $2.5 million
for New England groundfish research, $1 million for Atlantic bluefin tuna
research, and $5 million for Gulf of Mexico fishery research.
And no, red snapper in the Gulf
and South Atlantic weren’t ignored, although such regions weren’t slated to
receive the inflated amounts allocated by the House majority. Instead, the Senate allocated $1 million,
rather than the House majority's $5 million, to validate the Great Red Snapper Count, and another $1
million above 2024 funding levels for additional South Atlantic reef fish research.
With respect to the Marine
Recreational Information Program, the Senate report noted that
“The Committee is concerned by reports
that the Marine Recreational Information Program [Fishing Effort Survey] may be
vastly overstating fishing effort. While
the FES methodology represents a clear improvement from previous methodologies,
the Committee supports the cautious approach to using these estimates advocated
by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council and South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council Scientific and Statistical Committees. The Committee encourages NMFS to conduct a thorough
analysis of the effect if each estimate on stock status and allocation before
they are used for stock management.”
However, what the Senate
appropriators did not do was reach into the pork barrel and hand out $30
million to be used to develop state data collection programs for the southeast
states—while relegating the remainder of the coastal states, which lie outside of that
privileged region, to the continuing use of MRIP.
There are many other differences
between the appropriation bills, and each of those differences will, if the bills
are passed by their respective houses as currently written, have to be
reconciled in a conference in which each house of Congress will be represented.
There will be winners and losers
on many issues, and although we can’t be sure what the final appropriations
bill will look like, we can expect that it will be neither as small-minded and
tight-fisted as the House majority’s version, nor as provident, thoughtful, and
generous as the current Senate bill.
Hopefully, it will be workable.
But the key issues will not be resolved when the 2025 appropriation bill becomes law. Next year, the fight will begin again, and the 2026 appropriations bill may be better or worse, depending on who has the power in both houses of Congress.
This is not,
I should note, a pure party-line issue, and I don’t want to suggest that virtue
favors only one of the two major parties—fisheries conservation has traditionally been a
bipartisan issue, and seems to remain so in the Senate today.
Instead, it is a question of philosophy
and ideology: Are Americans willing to
invest in healthy, sustainable fish stocks, that can provide food and
recreation well into the future? Or do
they believe that marine resources should be, at best, exploited for short-term
gains or, at worst, ignored to meet whatever fate the future may hold, but in
any event shouldn't be deemed worthy of the investment needed for proper conservation and
management?
Each candidate on the ballot this
November will have a different answer to those questions, and with the election
barely three months away, it is time for concerned voters to determine just how
each candidate views ocean issues, and so determine who should and should not hold
elective office.
For as I noted when this essay
began, elections have consequences for each of us, and for our fisheries, too.
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