Congratulations to California activists! Following public outcry, California affirms water as a human right more wins »
X

Stay Informed

Sign up for email to learn how you can protect food and water in your community.

   Please leave this field empty

Connect with us

Twitter Facebook RSS Flickr YouTube
I turn to FWW for information that I can't seem to get elsewhere. They keep me updated on ways I can support issues that matter to me, like the labeling of GE foods, and also helps me make more informed food choices.
Mel Newburn
Share |
August 27th, 2009

Obama Administration Approves Harmful Privatization Plan for Managing Mid-Atlantic Fishery

CONTACT:
Ben Bowman, (202) 683-2443, [email protected]
Erica Schuetz, (202) 683-4903, [email protected]

Obama Administration Approves Harmful Privatization Plan for Managing Mid-Atlantic Fishery

Statement of Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter

“Yesterday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration approved an unfair and potentially destructive plan for managing the tilefish fishery of the mid-Atlantic region, known as Individual Fishing Quotas or catch shares. Tilefish is a common finfish of the region, and the fishery is predicted to be a $10 million industry when rebuilt. Under this plan, only fishermen who are awarded “shares” by the management council‚Äîin this case, the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council–are allowed to fish, while large numbers of fishermen are pushed out of their jobs. The plan determines how much quota share a fisherman receives based on the quantities he has caught in the past, thus inherently favoring bigger players and squeezing out many smaller-scale and historic fishermen. This plan also essentially privatizes the resource, ensuring that all the profit gained from its use benefits only a few, despite that oceans and fish resources are to be held in public trust for the benefit of all.

“The plan also includes a 49 percent accumulation cap, meaning that one fisherman or fishing company may have exclusive access to as much as 49 percent of all the fish under this plan‚Äîand as few as three companies could control the entire fishery. This could amount to a near-monopoly. In 2007, then U.S. House Representative Jim Saxton (R-N.J. 3) raised concerns over this control issue with the U.S. Department of Justice‚ Antitrust Division.

“Further, while this plan is billed as necessary for conservation, it is entirely about economics. Catch share plans do not eliminate environmental problems such as overfishing, and may even exacerbate them. The plan places the resources in the hands of a small number of people–and in the process, eliminates large numbers of jobs. Food & Water Watch opposes this plan and the privatization of publicly held resources, and supports community-based fishery management solutions that work to balance economic, environmental and social concerns by keeping the public in control of public resources.”

The Food & Water Watch Fish Program promotes cleaner, greener, safer seafood for consumers, while helping to protect the environment and support long-term wellbeing of coastal communities.

###

Food & Water Watch works to ensure the food, water and fish we consume is safe, accessible and sustainable. So we can all enjoy and trust in what we eat and drink, we help people take charge of where their food comes from, keep clean, affordable, public tap water flowing freely to our homes, protect the environmental quality of oceans, force government to do its job protecting citizens, and educate about the importance of keeping shared resources under public control.

###