(Posted 3/26/09)
New York anglers come up short against
stacked deck
“Conservation
equivalency” leaves state no good options on summer flounder
Coastal Conservation Association New York
PO Box 1118, West Babylon, NY 11704
www.ccany.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 26, 2009
CONTACT: Charles
Witek, 1-800-201-FISH
WEST BABYLON, NY —Holding a bad hand and with no
hole-cards left, the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC) issued final summer flounder regulations for the
2009 season that are severe and will likely disappoint many
anglers. However, despite of the severity of the regulations, CCA
NY commends DEC staff for the time and labor that it expended in its
efforts to craft the most palatable set of rules that would still meet
the conditions imposed by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council
and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC).
For the 2009 season, anglers fishing New York waters
will be limited to just two summer flounder no less than 21 inches long
and will be given only a short, split season that will be open from May
15 to June 15, and again from July 2 to August 17.
“The restrictive limits and short season are going to badly hurt both
anglers and angling-related businesses,” noted CCA New York President
Bill Raab. “But after the Council and ASMFC rejected coastwide
management measures, and ASMFC imposed a requirement that at least half
of New York’s harvest reduction had to come from a shortened season,
the DEC’s hands were tied.”
The diverse nature of New York’s fluke fishery makes
setting regulations extremely difficult. The North Fork of Long
Island enjoys a run of large fluke in May, while fishing in western
Long Island Sound might not heat up until June. July and August
are productive months throughout the state, but parts of the South
Shore may have good fishing that runs late into the fall.
“We think that the DEC was dealt a very bad hand, and that they played
it as well as they could,” said Scott Emslie, CCA NY’s state
chairman. “There was no way for the DEC to draft regulations that
everyone would be happy with. The very best that we could have
expected them to do was to adopt regulations that gave everyone,
wherever they live or fish, a fair chance to take home a couple of
fish, and to spread the pain as widely as possible. CCA NY
believes that the DEC achieved that goal.”
Currently, fluke are not managed on a coastwide
basis, but pursuant to a “conservation equivalency” scheme that assigns
each state a fixed share of the recreational harvest. New York’s
share is just 17.5 percent.
“There is no escaping the fact that no one is happy with the 2009
rules, and that they are going to hurt a lot of people,” explains Brian
O’Keefe, CCA NY’s Government Relations chairman. “But it is also
undeniable that the DEC was put in a box by the Council and ASMFC, and
their insistence on state-by-state management. So long as ASMFC
continues to grant New Jersey almost 40 percent of all recreational
landings, the plight of New York’s anglers and related businesses isn’t
likely to improve.”