Commercial fishermen who are challenging a major shift of Gulf of Mexico red grouper quotas to the recreational sector have drawn the surprising support of charter boat operators, who argue the revised quotas would hurt their businesses as well.

 On its face, the decision by the National Marine Fisheries Service to ratify the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council’s new allocation policy would give the charter fleet more fish too. But the change will bring other outcomes to hurt the charter sector, said captain Scott Hickman, operator of Circle H Outfitters and Charters in Galveston, Texas, and a board member of the Charter Fishermen’s Association.

 “We’ve been down this road before,” said Hickman. “You set a precedent for taking quota from an accountable sector, and dropping it into a black hole.”

 Announced by NMFS this spring, Amendment 53 to the Gulf reef fish plan would reduce the annual commercial allocation to 59.3 percent, down from 76 percent, and increase the recreational allocation from 24 percent to 40.7 percent.

 The move is being challenged in federal district court by the Galveston, Texas-based Gulf of Mexico Reef Fish Shareholders Alliance, the A.P. Bell Fish Company, of Cortez, Florida, and the Southern Offshore Fishing Association, a longliner group based in Madeira Beach, Florida.

 The case is tentatively scheduled for courtroom arguments in October.

 The Charter Fishermen’s Association joined in by filing an amicus, or “friend of the court” legal brief to express their opinion and advice on the case. The charter captains have done the same with earlier moves to shift more red snapper quota to the recreational sector, allying with commercial fishermen to challenge the Gulf council and NMFS.

 Awarding more quota to the recreational side has led to overruns in landings, and subsequent cuts that ultimately hurt the for-hire recreational sector and associated shoreside businesses like restaurants that depend on anglers, said Hickman.

 “So over the last 15 years or so we’ve found we’re better aligned with the commercial sector,” said Hickman.

 Long-term population and demographic changes on the Gulf coast have helped boost the influence of recreational fishing advocacy groups like the Coastal Conservation Foundation and American Sportfishing Association, aided by marine and fishing equipment manufacturers.

 Those changes have swung the pendulum on council membership.

 “They’ve flipped control of our council,” said Hickman, noting that council seats that had been held by commercial representatives for 30 years are being whittled away.

 “Where do you draw the line?” said Hickman. “If you’re wealthy enough to own a house on the coast, and a half-million dollar offshore boat, should you control all the resource?”

 Critics of Amendment 53 say NMFS and the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council based the reallocation on a new methodology for calculating recreational landings. That methodology is already extending recalculation to other Gulf fisheries.

 "Reallocation to the recreational sector under Amendment 53 increases dead discards and commercial fishermen are forced to fish under a reduced catch limit to cover those discards," the Reef Shareholders Alliance said in June. "So commercial fishermen are penalized twice:  first by the reallocation and second, by lower overall catch limits to offset increased recreational discards.  In essence, commercial fishermen now have a smaller piece of a smaller pie as a result of Amendment 53."

The political influence of the recreational lobby inspired another player to jump into the Gulf of Mexico red grouper lawsuit: Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.

 In a motion in federal court, Landry seeks to join as an intervenor in the case brought by commercial fishermen. In an Aug 23 statement Landry characterized the lawsuit as “attempting to stifle recreational fishing in Louisiana.”

 “I will continue fighting to ensure Louisiana remains ‘The Sportsman’s Paradise’ for all who live and visit here,” said Landry. “Recreational and commercial fishing have coexisted in Louisiana for ages; we cannot allow one to be preserved at the expense of the other.”

 Landry should not be allowed to join the case as an intervenor, said Eric Brazer, deputy director of the Reef Shareholders Alliance.

“We opposed on the grounds that Louisiana does not have standing (as defined by the law) but would not be opposed if they wanted to submit an amicus brief,” said Brazer.

 Recreational fishing survey data show only a handful of red grouper caught by Louisiana anglers, said Ashford Rosenberg, policy director with the Gulf of Mexico Reef Fish Shareholders’ Alliance.

 “It’s a bit of a stretch to say this is going to hurt” sport fishing in Louisiana, she said.

 

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Associate Editor Kirk Moore was a reporter for the Asbury Park Press for more than 30 years and a 25-year field editor for National Fisherman before joining our Commercial Marine editorial staff in 2015. He wrote several award-winning stories on marine, environmental, coastal and military issues that helped drive federal and state government policy changes. Moore was awarded the Online News Association 2011 Knight Award for Public Service for the “Barnegat Bay Under Stress,” 2010 series that led to the New Jersey state government’s restoration plan. He lives in West Creek, N.J.

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