California Fish & Game Announces Channel Islands Closure
Approximately 30% of Southern California's Best Fishing
Area Affected!
(Alexandria, VA) In what many anglers fear may be the first
in a series of sweeping nationwide closures, yesterday California
Governor Gray Davis dismissed the concerns of anglers and
scientists by slamming the door on some of the most popular
recreational fishing areas in Southern California.
“We all have an interest in seeing healthy fish,
especially anglers,” said Mike Nussman, President
and CEO of the American Sportfishing Association. “The
sportfishing community has long supported focused closures
as part of a larger management strategy, but this single-minded
philosophy of banning public access absent any scientific
or economic merit is misguided.”
Under a decision announced late yesterday at a meeting
of the California Fish and Game Commission in Santa Barbara,
175 square miles of coastal waters surrounding the Channel
Islands, equaling about 30 percent of Southern California’s
best fishing areas, will be placed permanently off-limits
(including catch and release fishing). Not only will thousands
of people in the region no longer be able to pursue America’s
most popular outdoor leisure time sport, but local charter
boats, hotels, restaurants and other businesses that rely
on angler dollars will suffer. Annual losses in retail sales
due to the closures may reach $50 million according to a
recent analysis by Southwick Associates, a leading natural
resource economic consulting firm.
California is second only to Florida in the number of anglers
and the amount of money spent on fishing. More than 2.4
million people in California spend $2.38 billion on recreational
fishing each year. In excess of 43,000 jobs and $60 million
in state tax revenue is tied to recreational fishing according
to an American Sportfishing Association analysis of U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service data.
Anglers are concerned that California may be only the first
domino to fall, triggering a broader movement towards unnecessary
bans of recreational fishing. Further closures are likely
in California and similar efforts are underway in other
coastal states including Oregon, Massachusetts and Florida.
These efforts, aggressively pushed by several environmental
activist organizations, have moved forward despite concerns
raised by anglers, conservation groups, respected outdoor
journalists, and scientists.
Determined not to allow the California decision to set
precedent, anglers and conservation organizations have united
to launch the Freedom to Fish campaign. It is a reflection
of their shared interest in advancing marine management
programs based on sound science and ensuring angler access
when recreational fishing is not jeopardizing fish populations.
Led nationally by the American Sportfishing Association,
the group of supporters includes B.A.S.S./ESPN, Coastal
Conservation Association, International Game Fish Association,
Jersey Coast Anglers Association, National Marine Manufacturers
Association, Recreational Fishing Alliance, Sportfishing
Association of California, and United Anglers of Southern
California. With a combined membership of over a million,
these groups worked with the ASA to craft the Freedom To
Fish Act, now pending in Congress, and helped mobilize more
than 5,000 angler letters petitioning Congress for its passage.
“With Atlantic striped bass, redfish, white seabass,
and many other sportfish, anglers have demonstrated their
willingness to sacrifice fishing access or technique when
it was necessary to recover fish populations,” Nussman
said. “What we’re seeing now is the theoretical
fervor for marine protected areas getting far ahead of the
scientific evidence to support such measures.”
Numerous independent authorities on fisheries management
have expressed unease over the lack of any empirical evidence
in support of marine protected areas and disputed the environmentalists’
claim that anglers would benefit from massive closures (see
attachement). In findings presented earlier this year to
the California Fish and Game Commission, Dr. Robert Shipp,
an authority on fisheries management and Marine Sciences
Chair at the University of South Alabama, noted that better
implementation of existing regulations would be a more common-sense
method for recovering depressed fish populations.
Characterizing yesterday’s decision on the Channel
Islands, Tom Raftican, president of the popular angler organization,
United Anglers of Southern California said, “the Commission
went blasting ahead with a ready, fire, aim approach…
California anglers have just been knocked flat by the train
leaving the station. Other states need to take notice because
they’re next.”
To join the Freedom To Fish campaign to protect fish and
citizens opportunity to go fishing, please visit www.FreedomToFish.org.
The American Sportfishing Association is the recreational
fishing trade association, with more than 500 members representing
the fishing and boating industry, state and federal natural
resource agencies, angler advocacy groups, and outdoor journalists.
The American Sportfishing Association initiates and supports
efforts to advance healthy fisheries, fishing opportunities,
and a profitable sportfishing industry.
Supporters of the Freedom To Fish Act include the American
Sportfishing Association, B.A.S.S., Coastal Conservation
Association, International Game Fish Association, Jersey
Coast Anglers Association, National Marine Manufacturers
Association, Recreational Fishing Alliance, Sportfishing
Association of California and United Anglers of Southern
California. For more information, visit www.FreedomToFish.org.
READ ON!!!
Please also take a look at the attached
newsletter “MPA News” published by the University
of Washington. Their report on measuring the effects of
marine protected areas supports our contention that the
science of MPAs has not caught up to the rhetoric.