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View Full Version : Fugg'in Liberals + SF 9th circuit court =U.S. bans swordfishing to help sea turtles



carbonmarine
03-12-2004, 02:39 PM
amazing ,,,,,, What these guys do... File a case withe th most liberal court in the land, get a ruling and it stands... Only a vote takes it aparts.... Same thing is happening with Glamis and also the Noise law that just went in for us Boaters....
U.S. bans swordfishing to help sea turtles
Commercial trawlers often snag turtles, other marine life
The Associated Press, Updated: 9:15 a.m. ET March 12, 2004
SAN FRANCISCO Commercial fishing for swordfish -- one of the more popular seafoods for consumers -- has been banned by the United States in a large swath of the Pacific Ocean. The move aims not at saving swordfish but endangered sea turtles.
The new rules, released Thursday by the National Marine Fisheries Service, prohibit what's called "longline" fishing for swordfish in the Pacific between the West Coast and Hawaii. The ban, scheduled to take effect April 12, will affect about two dozen fishing boats based in California, Oregon and Washington.
Longlining uses miles of line and thousands of baited hooks. Sea turtles as well as birds, sharks and dolphins going after food often get hooked accidentally as a result. Recreational fishing is not affected.
Moral high ground
“It’s an important step in protecting endangered sea turtles from going extinct,” said Todd Steiner, director of the Turtle Island Restoration Network, which lobbied for the ban. “It won’t save the sea turtles by itself, but when the U.S. takes proper action, it’s in a better moral position to get other countries to also take action.”
The United States makes up only about 5 percent of the global swordfish fishing fleet, Steiner said. Japan, Korea and Taiwan all have large fleets.
Federal officials have estimated that “long-lining” kills 61 threatened loggerhead sea turtles and 15 endangered leatherback sea turtles each year. Biologists say the leatherback could become extinct in 10 to 30 years if current trends continue.
Court supports action
The fisheries service issued the ban after its scientists determined that continued swordfish fishing would jeopardize the survival of the sea turtles, said Tim Price, the agencyÂ’s assistant regional administrator for protected resources.
In August, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the fisheries service had violated the Endangered Species Act by allowing longline fishermen to continue operating along the West Coast.
The fishermen have said a ban on swordfish fishing would threaten their livelihood.
The rules bar longline fishermen from bringing in their catch to West Coast ports. A 2001 federal

572Daytona
03-12-2004, 02:46 PM
I wouldn't think that the US even has jurisdiction in the ocean all the way to Hawaii. Doesn't a country's boundries end so many miles offshore?

mikev
03-12-2004, 02:55 PM
Originally posted by 572Daytona
I wouldn't think that the US even has jurisdiction in the ocean all the way to Hawaii. Doesn't a country's boundries end so many miles offshore?
yes but commercial fishing boats must comply with the rules of there home port.

572Daytona
03-12-2004, 03:21 PM
Originally posted by mikev
yes but commercial fishing boats must comply with the rules of there home port.
Thanks for the explanation. So by passing this law from what they are saying they are only going to stop 5% of the estimated turtle deaths at the expense of quote a few US jobs. Do you think Kerry will defend this one?

Schiada76
03-12-2004, 03:47 PM
****! I hate to agree with the 9th circuit but on this I do. On the West coast swordy fishing has traditionally been a "stick boat" operation (harpoon) It has sustained the resource for generations. The longliners (for the most part) have been displaced here from the East Coast where they were banned for DECIMATING the swordy population. They are supposed to stay far offshore so as not to compete with the local long term established harpoon fleet but it is still a high impact form of take with huge bycatch. Long lining and bottom trawling both need to be highly resticted.