CCA Florida Launches STAR Tournament Lucky member wins
Transcription
CCA Florida Launches STAR Tournament Lucky member wins
2 0 1 5 SP R IN G T H E P U B L I C AT I O N D E D I C AT E D TO C O N S E R V I N G A N D P R OT E C T I N G F LO R I D A ’ S M A R I N E R E S O U R C E S CCA Florida Launches STAR Tournament Supreme Court Upholds Net Ban Lucky member wins Pathfinder Boat S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 1 contents starting point S P R ING By Paul Giordano, Vice Chairman, CCA Florida Welcome to a new age for CCA Florida! As you will see throughout this issue, CCA Florida is launching the CCA Florida STAR Tournament. The tournament kicks off Memorial Day weekend and continues all summer long until Labor Day. Tournament anglers will primarily be targeting 80 specially tagged STAR redfish. The first 6 tournament-registered anglers to catch one of these fish will win great prizes like a Contender 22 Center Console, a Pathfinder 2200 TRS or a Hell’s Bay Waterman! All packages include custom trailers and Yamaha power! In addition to the tagged redfish division, the STAR tournament will also feature a photo contest in other divisions including snook, trout, sheepshead and cobia! All of these elements will be handled through the new STAR app, which was developed in cooperation with the Snook and Gamefish Foundation. Not only will the app help anglers submit their catch for the tournament, but it will also be used by scientists to help establish possibly the largest record of recreational fishing data ever! The real beauty of STAR is that the tournament will be a vehicle to raise awareness of CCA and will encourage families to get out on the water and enjoy the marine resources we all fight so hard to protect. The tournament is structured to return all proceeds back to the tournament in the form of prizes, advertising and promotion. The result will be the largest single media campaign that CCA Florida has ever experienced! After the tournament runs, we should no longer have to answer, “What is CCA?” every time we talk to a potential member or sponsor. Partnering with the best names in the fishing industry will further help establish CCA Florida as the type of organization anyone should be proud to join. The list of sponsors is truly a “Who’s Who” of fishing in Florida including: Contender Boats, Maverick Boat Company, Hell’s Bay Boatworks, Engel Coolers, Marathon Petroleum, Florida Sportsman, Costa Sunglasses, Papa’s Pilar Rum, Finlandia Vodka, the Florida Insider Fishing Report, Flats Class TV and many more. While the first year of STAR will be west coast only, it is critical that we get as many people registered as possible. Even the most die-hard east coast anglers should fish the west coast often enough to justify the $30 entry fee when the possible return is a $50,000 boat, motor and trailer package! If you already fish the west coast primarily, there is no reason to not enter! You don’t want to be THAT person - you know, the one who catches the STAR-tagged fish but did not enter the tournament, which is exactly what happened last year in Louisiana. So sign up today! Registration is open at CCAFLSTAR.com. Sign your family up, and tell your friends to sign up, too! Let’s make this STAR tournament a huge success for CCA and the fish! 2 T H E P U B L I C AT I O N D E D I C AT E D TO C O N S E R V I N G A N D P R OT E C T I N G F LO R I D A ’ S M A R I N E R E S O U R C E S The first year of STAR 4 2015 Supreme Court Upholds Net Ban 12 17 CCA Florida Launches S T A R To u r n a m e n t Lucky member wins Pathfinder Boat de par t me nt s top comments................................... 3 conservation focus.............................. 4 CCA banquet schedule......................... 5 around the state.............................. 10 habitat horizon................................ 18 FWC law enforcement update.............. 26 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 Editorial/business inquiries and information requests: Dan Askin, P.O. Box 568886, Orlando, Florida, 32856-8886 407-854-7002 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to CCA Florida, P.O. Box 568886, Orlando, Florida, 32856-8886 407-854-7002 ccaflorida.org Managing Editor Dan Askin Editor Ted Forsgren Copy Editor Melissa J. Smith Creative Director Debbie Dewell Great Minds, Inc. 850-386-7401 Printer Durraprint Tallahassee CCA FLORIDA STAFF Brian Gorski Executive Director Dan Askin Chief Operating Officer Trip Aukeman Director of Advocacy Ted Forsgren Special Advisor - Advocacy Adam Miller Senior Regional Director Matt Behm Regional Director Caitlin Mitchell Regional Director Nick Pectol Regional Director Zach Batley Regional Director Chris Bozas Assistant Regional Director Amy Kuehnert Assistant Regional Director Miriam Askin Event Coordinator Leiza Fitzgerald STAR Tournament Director Karen Hood Accountant S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 It’s all about STAR! After many months of planning, CCA Florida will launch its first ever STAR fishing tournament this year. The tournament begins the Saturday of Memorial Day Weekend, May 23, and ends Labor Day, September 7. The format is designed to be family-friendly and otherwise inclusive to all aspects of Florida’s recreational fishing community. STAR has a very reasonable $60 entry fee for anglers ages 18 and up, which includes a CCA Membership. Existing CCA members pay only $30 to enter, and the tournament is otherwise free to current New Tide members, which is CCA’s youth membership category, for ages 6 to 17. To qualify for prizes, all entrants CCA memberships must be active all tournament days. “We have modeled our rules and format after CCA Texas and CCA Louisiana, but have tweaked them to a certain degree to adapt to Florida’s unique fisheries and CCA’s conservation heritage,” STAR Director Leiza Fitzgerald said. “Our partners in Texas and Louisiana have been running STAR tournaments for 25 years with great success.” Fitzgerald was particularly excited about STAR’s featured tagged redfish division. “With the help of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, we will be tagging and releasing over 80 redfish in Florida waters in advance of the tournament. STAR-registered anglers are eligible for fantastic prizes should they catch a STAR-tagged redfish during the tournament dates.” Top prizes for any recaptured tagged redfish are attention-getting indeed, and include a Contender center console, a Pathfinder bay boat and a Hells Bay technical poling skiff. Each boat package includes a premium trailer and a Yamaha outboard. “I’m not sure any other tournament in Florida can boast these kinds of quality prizes,” Leiza added. In addition to the tagged redfish division, the format includes an open division, a ladies division, a kayak division, a fly division and a Marathon Petroleum conservation division, all with other incredible awards. The conservation division will help FWC marine biologists gather vital recreational catch data and will ultimately assist them with ongoing fisheries management issues. The tournament also features a youth division, which includes up to $100,000 in scholarship awards for New Tide members. In its first year, tournament boundaries will include state of Florida waters, extending from the Florida/Alabama border all the way south to the waters of Everglades National Park. The STAR committee plans on expanding fishing boundaries to include all state waters in future tournament years. On behalf of CCA Florida, I would like to thank the many sponsors who are making the STAR tournament a reality in Florida. Without them, the tournament would never get off the ground. CCA also acknowledges its strategic partnership with FWC and its commissioners in STAR’s first year. Gratitude also goes to the STAR tournament committee members, who have invested a great deal of their free time to organize a family-oriented event for Florida’s recreational anglers. Specifically, I offer heartfelt appreciation to past CCA Florida Chairman Jim Williams, who dedicated countless hours to make STAR a reality. Thanks, Jim. Look for more information on STAR in the coming weeks, and you can read more about the tournament in this edition of Sea Watch. For tournament rules and details on how to register, visit STAR’s website at ccaflstar.com. You can also make friends with CCA STAR on Facebook. I encourage you to join the fun by registering for the first-ever STAR tournament in Florida. You might even make history and win some great prizes in the process. top comments SeaWatch is published three times a year by CCA Florida, a nonprofit state affiliate of the Coastal Conservation Association. By Bill Camp Chairman, CCA Florida Advertise Today! 407-854-7002 3 nservation focus conservation focus conservatio Supreme Court Upholds Florida’s Net Ban Gillnetters seeking to overturn constitutional amendment denied. Again. tor Brian Gorski. “They did a fantastic job to ensure that our state remains the Sportfishing Capital of the World. This is a great day for anglers and another reminder that CCA Florida can never let its guard down as the advocate for our marine resources.” On February 12, the Florida Supreme Court denied a petition by the Wakulla Commercial Fishermen’s Association and upheld the state’s net ban amendment, which was approved by 72 percent of voters in 1994.The ruling puts an end to the latest challenge brought by gillnetters, who won a sympathetic circuit court ruling in 2013 that allowed them to briefly reintroduce destructive gill nets into Florida waters.The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, with the support of CCA Florida, challenged that initial court ruling immediately and has worked tirelessly ever since to defend the net ban to the state’s highest court. “The Constitutional Amendment that has protected Florida’s marine fisheries for more than 20 years is safe and intact once again,” Bill Camp, CCA Florida Chairman, said.“We are grateful to the FWC for its efforts to reverse a wayward court ruling that threatened to turn the clock back to the dark days of gillnetting in our state waters. We have been down this road many times, and there is no doubt the gillnetters will try again, but CCA stands ready to protect our fisheries and to make sure gill nets remain a part of Florida’s past, not our future.” The 1994 net ban amendment has been credited with bringing about a dramatic improvement in bait and forage fish populations, along with a powerful recovery in red drum, speckled trout, snook and other species that provide the foundation for a billion-dollar recreational industry. Florida’s constitutional amendment has been the subject of constant legal challenges from disgruntled industrial harvesters seeking to undo all that has been achieved. “The FWC, Attorney General Pam Bondi and especially Assistant Attorney General Jonathan Glogau all deserve the respect and gratitude of anglers, not just in Florida but all over the country, for their efforts on this case,” said CCA Florida Executive Direc- 4 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 on focus conservation focus co Gulf Council Members Urge Commerce Secretary to reject Amendment 40 Minority report highlights flaws in sector separation amendment Eight representatives of the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council have submitted a minority report to the National Marine Fisheries Service that lays out an extensive series of objections to a highly controversial management plan for Gulf red snapper. The report focuses on significant shortcomings in the development and presentation of Amendment 40, a measure that will reserve a significant percentage of the recreational red snapper quota solely for use by the charter/for-hire industry. Amendment 40 was narrowly approved at the October meeting of the Gulf Council and is now pending approval by the U.S. Secretary of Commerce. “The action adopted by the majority lacks support, especially from the Gulf states, and hinders future management of the fishery,” the report states. “This amendment and this vote signify that federal management of the red snapper fishery is broken. The way Amendment 40 was pushed through the Council process does not foster cooperative and collaborative work between the Council and the Gulf states to manage this fishery. Most importantly, it violates several National Standards. As such it is both bad policy, and in violation of the Act. For these reasons, the Secretary should reject the amendment.” The report is signed by council members from Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida, including state fisheries directors from each of those states. It also contains an email from the director of Alabama’s Marine Resources Division, which explains that the state voted for the amendment in exchange for the inclusion of a sunset provision that would automatically abandon sector separation in three years unless the Council takes action. The Council approved Amendment 40 by a 10-7 vote over opposition from the Gulf states, Congress, the vast majority of recreational anglers and even from within the charter/for-hire industry itself. In fact, the minority report calculated that more than 96 percent of all public comments were opposed to Amendment 40, but the amendment was still jammed through the Council process. Until it is signed by the Secretary of Commerce, however, Amendment 40 is just a recommendation from the Gulf Council with no legal standing. “In addition to being poor policy, sector separation is also bad law. Without an agreement on the allocation, the Council cannot know the impacts. And without knowing the impacts, the Council cannot propose to manage the fishery,” the report concludes. “In addition, the potential one day derby fishery puts private anglers at risk, and exacerbates the conflicts within the sector. These issues are in direct violation of a number of national standards. Therefore, the minority requests the Secretary to reject the amendment and have the Council collect the information necessary to make an informed decision.” Picture It! We want great photos from our members! Help keep Seawatch “One of the best conservation publications in Florida.” Please send your photos to Dan Askin, P.O. Box 568886, Orlando, Florida, 32856-8886 407-854-7002 daskin@ccaflorida.org Presented by Yamaha CCA FLORIDA BANQUET SCHEDULE APRIL Knight’s Banquet Thursday, April 23 The inaugural Carl Black CCA Knights Banquet presented by Costa Sunglasses and Mudhole Custom Tackle will be held Thursday, April 23.Made up entirely of UCF students and alumni, this event will be held at Carl Black of Orlando! We are moving the cars out of the showroom and bringing in the banquet — including open bar! For more information, please contact Nick Pectol at 321-271-7723 Hernando Banquet Thursday, April 23 This event will be held in Heffernan Hall at St. Anthony Catholic Church and is guaranteed to be a blast. There will be a catered dinner and an open bar! We know we have your attention now! For more information, please contact Zack Batley at 813-943-8993 Sarasota Photo All-Release Challenge & Barbeque Friday and Saturday, April 24 & 25 The 20th annual Sarasota All Release Challenge and BBQ presented by Hidden Harbor is scheduled for April 24 and 25 at Hidden Harbor Marina. The Captains’ meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Friday at Hidden Harbor, followed by the tournament and BBQ Saturday. Your entry fee of $95 per angler includes hors d’oeuvres at the captain’s meeting, a tackle box with over $100 in lures, a T-shirt and tickets to the BBQ Saturday night - including open bar! Divisions include: angler, ladies, fly and youth. Tickets for the BBQ can be purchased separately for $50 and include a one-year CCA membership. For more information, contact Adam Miller at 941-270-0895 South Walton Kid’s Tournament Sunday, April 26 The annual Kids Tournament will be held at The Red Bar in Grayton Beach. The time for the tournament is noon to 4 p.m. All registered participants will receive a rod and reel from Fish Florida, Pompano rigs and shrimp from Yellowfin Ocean Sports and a beach rod holder from Ferguson Water Works. For more information, please contact Neill O’Connell at 850-4191260 or Caitlin Mitchell at 334391-2232 (continued on page 21) S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 5 nservation focus conservation focus conservatio By Bill Camp Chairman, CCA Florida Amendment 1 Approved By Florida Voters Photos by Mike Conner Florida voters sent a strong message to the Florida Legislature last November by voting to approve Amendment 1 by a resounding 75 to 25 percent margin. The amendment received approximately 4.2 million affirmative votes. As a refresher, Amendment 1, otherwise known as the Florida Water and Land Conservation Initiative, requires Florida’s legislature to use 33 percent of all net documentary tax revenues from real estate transactions (known as “doc stamps”) over the next two decades for the purchase, restoration, improvement, and management of conservation lands in the state. Amendment 1 required a supermajority of at least 60 percent to pass, as is mandated by Section 5 of Article XI in the Florida Constitution. Importantly, the amend- 6 ment’s adoption did not increase taxes or tax rates. Rather, it will redirect tax revenues from a specific source, for a specific purpose, over a specific amount of time. One third of tax revenues from doc stamps from fiscal 2015-2016 are estimated to be approximately $650 million. This number is forecast to roughly double by the 20th year of its authority, to about $1.2 billion annually, bringing the estimated cumulative authority of the amendment to about $10 billion. Florida has had a long history of initiatives designed to accomplish objectives similar to Amendment 1’s. However, all prior programs have been created through legislative mandates. Florida’s Land Acquisition Trust Fund was originally created by Florida’s legislature in 1963. Its intent was designed to fund outdoor recreation and conservation programs, focusing on purchasing land for parks and recreation. It was funded by a sales tax on outdoor equipment and clothing. Five years later, the legislature discontinued the outdoor equipment and clothing sales tax and voted to fund the Trust Fund with the sale of municipal bonds. The bond interest was to be serviced primarily by doc stamp revenue from real estate sales. Other more ambitious efforts followed. Preservation 2000 was signed into law by Governor Bob Martinez in 1990, which endeavored to place close to 900,000 acres of land under state control. In the ensuing decade, the state spent about $300 million of doc stamp taxes (facilitated by a bond issue) each year on P2000 conservation measures. In 1999, then Governor Jeb Bush replaced P2000 with the Florida Forever Act, which was designed to buy land critical to Florida’s water supply and habitat, and to help the survival of over 500 endangered or threatened species. The Florida Forever program has acquired more than 700,000 acres of land since its inception, for about $2.9 billion. The two laws combined to produce the largest public land acquisition programs in the country, and by the turn of the century, the state had purchased more than 2.5 million acres. This brought Florida’s total conservation acreage to almost 10 million, managed by various state, federal, and local government entities. Land purchased under P2000 and the Florida Forever Act is held in trust for the citizens of Florida, and it is managed by various state agencies, the largest of which are the Division of State Lands, Florida’s Water Management Districts, and the Florida Communities Trust. Submerged acreage managed by various government entities adds another 3.6 million acres to the grand total and, in case you are wondering, Florida’s total non-submerged land mass is just under 35 million acres. The recession that formally began in 2008 put a large dent in the doc stamp revenues that could be employed to further Florida Forever’s directives. The resulting decline in appropriations for sensitive land acquisition led citizen groups to mobilize to restore a funding source for conservation purposes. This led to Amendment 1. CCA Florida supported Amendment 1, S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 on focus conservation focus conservation focus along with several other prominent Florida conservation groups, including Florida Audubon, the Everglades Foundation, Florida Wildlife Federation, Florida Conservation Coalition, the Snook Foundation, Tampa Bay Watch, river keepers from around the state, and a host of others. From an economic standpoint, CCA firmly believes sound conservation measures can still create a good business environment. CCA Florida has proven this to the be the case over and over again in our fisheries management, and believe the same dynamic to be at play when our state takes constructive steps to conserve sensitive lands for their natural beauty, their role in our complex ecosystem, and for human beings to enjoy. For example, a healthy Indian River Lagoon system has an estimated $3.7 billion annual economic impact alone. Similar economic dynamics exist for so many other areas of the state, such as the Keys, Pine Island Sound, Tampa Bay, and Florida Bay. Given Florida’s complicated hydrology, it is virtually impossible to divorce landbased conversation issues from the state’s overall water quality. They directly affect Florida’s marine resources, in fresh, brackish, and salt water environs. This has pro- S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 found effects on Florida’s fish, near and dear to all of our hearts. Now comes the sticky part. How should the state prioritize the lands to be purchased with funds raised by Amendment 1? What existing state lands and adjoining properties need conservation improvements and enhanced management? No doubt, state water policy will be in the middle of any ensuing debates on the use Amendment 1 funds. The state is now soliciting input from Florida residents and all stakeholders to help prioritize the use of the funds that will now be available for conservation purposes. Now dormant or incomplete programs, such as the purchase of agricultural lands south of Lake Okeechobee, or the completion of the Kissimmee River restoration, should be high on the list, given the need to restore the state’s natural plumbing and ecology. In the case of the agricultural lands south of the lake, a willing seller exists and now the state will have funds to complete the purchase. A large portion of funds raised through Amendment 1 should also be deployed to finally address multiple water management and water quality issues around the state. A good start would be to finally require the removal of septic tanks and systems, primarily along damaged marine ecosystems. All wastewater treatment systems throughout the state should be put under the microscope. These programs could be initiated by local communities (as they have in some cases already, such as in Jupiter and Tequesta along the Loxahatchee River), and financed by Amendment 1 funds. The list of possible projects throughout the state is endless, but since funds are going to be immediately available, the time to act is now. Used prudently, Amendment 1 funds can and should have a positive impact on Florida’s water quality, marine resources, and economy. $10 billion can go a long way. 7 nservation focus conservation focus conservatio What I$ Wrong with the Gulf Council? It is not unusual for veterans of federal fishery management to marvel at the vastly different personalities of the various fishery management councils across the nation. Each region has its own distinct style of operation, and the New England Fishery Management Council has arguably held the title of most contentious arena given the region’s repeated groundfish disasters. However, an argument can be made of late that nothing compares to the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council. Recently, the Gulf Council has devolved to become the undisputed champion of dysfunction and acrimony. Packs of people roam the halls at Gulf Council meetings, plotting and scheming to influence proceedings. Public comment sessions at Gulf Council meetings routinely run for hours, as various factions try to convey the righteousness of their arguments by busing in overwhelming numbers to make three-minute statements. This happens occasionally at other fishery management bodies, but it has become a regular feature in the Gulf. The August 2014 comment session in Biloxi ran from roughly 5 o’clock in the afternoon to 11 o’clock that night, a test of endurance for everyone involved, including the three peace officers brought in to keep things under control.This went on despite the proclamation from a Louisiana council member that public comments don’t matter because “we all know how we’re going to vote anyway.” The drama of even a “normal” public 8 comment session at the Gulf Council is always heightened by regular outbreaks of boos, cheers, groans, jeers and assorted other noises from the crowd. The Council itself often resembles our dysfunctional, partisan, gridlocked Congress, particularly in its handling of the chaotic red snapper fishery. After years of inaction and ever-more draconian regulations, the Council lurched into a final vote over the controversial Amendment 40, which splits charter/ for-hire businesses into their own sector and assigns them an allocation. It sets the stage for a catch share program for the charter/ for-hire industry in which individual businesses will almost certainly end up owning a share of the fishery, much like the commercial sector in which roughly 380 people already own 51 percent of the entire fishery. Before tackling a series of motions on Amendment 40 at October’s meeting, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Regional Administrator Roy Crabtree made an appeal to council members for consensus and compromise.They went on to decide various aspects of the most controversial and questionable amendment in recent times by votes of 9-8, 9-8, 12-5, 9-8, 9-8 and 10-7. Appeal ignored Council and NOAA staffers often lament the challenges and shortcomings of the Gulf Council and wonder aloud why it has devolved into such a mess. By comparison at this point, the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council runs like a church service and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission like a military unit. So what’s the difference? It’s not a mystery. The same motivation that pulled the New England Council into chaos is at work here – greed. No council that manages fisheries with significant recreational participation is putting the amount of emphasis on catch shares and privatization as the Gulf Council. Since the creation of the commercial red snapper catch share program in 2007, the Gulf Council has become the place people come to grab their piece of the pie. The term “snapper baron” was coined to describe the massive transfer of wealth that occurred in the Gulf when that public resource was gifted and acquired by a select few commercial fishermen. It isn’t so much about managing fisheries anymore in the Gulf; it’s about manipulating the system and positioning yourself to reap a windfall. It’s ugly because it’s about money, and when people see an opportunity to take ownership of a prized resource like red snapper or amberjack or grouper, the long knives come out. Gulf Council and NOAA staff moan about the chaos, but their shepherding of this fishery and overt promotion of catch shares helped create it. If you choose to manage valuable public resources like a king dispensing favors, then you shouldn’t be surprised when respect and thoughtful discussion go right out the window. Everyone wants to be a winner, and they’ll do anything to be the next millionaire. If nothing derails Amendment 40, which until the Secretary of Commerce signs it is only a recommendation, the Gulf charter/for-hire industry is in for a tumultuous time. There is still no mechanism for how to allocate this pile of gold they’ve been given. Somehow, 1,300 boats from different regions are going to have to figure out how to divvy up millions of pounds of red snapper. If the Gulf Council is any indication, that won’t be a pretty process. Contrary to what many in that industry were led to believe, not everyone is going to be a winner. NOAA staff can cluck and shake their heads over the chaos in the Gulf, but their own misguided management philosophy is at the root of it. Unfortunately, now we all have to live with it. S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 on focus conservation focus conservation focus S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 9 around the state Day on the Hill When the governor stops by your event to raise awareness among the legislators, you know it’s going to be a good day! Gov. Rick Scott led the list of VIPs who stopped by CCA Florida’s Day on the Hill. The governor spoke with CCA Legacy Member Capt. Rick Murphy and shared a story about his grandson catching his first fish in Key Largo the previous weekend. CCA Florida took the show on the road to Tallahassee for our second annual Day on the Hill. The object of the event is to raise awareness of CCA Florida and of recreational fishing with the legislators in Tallahassee. From the economic impact that recreational fishing provides to habitat restoration work to getting our young people engaged in outdoor activities, we want them to understand the importance of the recreational angling community. If you based the success of our efforts on the statements of the VIPs that attended, our mission was accomplished! A large part of the Day on the Hill event centered on a press conference announcing the new CCA Florida STAR Tournament presented by Yamaha. Jim Williams, STAR Tournament chairman, kicked off the press conference, which included comments by Leiza Fitzgerald, STAR Tournament director, as well as Capt. Rick Murphy, host of Sportsman’s Adventures and the Florida Insider Fishing Report. Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam headed up a list of special VIP speakers at the press conference, which included FWC Commissioners Brian Yablonski and Charles Roberts. Commissioner Putnam began the guest comments by discussing the importance of recreational fishing on the economy of Florida and how fishing is such a great way of introducing families to all that Florida has to offer. Commisioners Yablonski and Roberts followed, each talking about their support of the STAR Tournament and the importance of their relationship with CCA Florida. Commisioner Yablonski put it best by saying, “We truly value the partnership we have with CCA Florida and look to CCA for input as the voice of recreational anglers when considering fisheries issues.” In addition to the press conference, the CCA display featured a lineup of our state sponsor boats with Contender, Pathfinder and Hell’s Bay boats all getting a lot of looks as legislators walked through. Displays also included oyster mats, mangroves and in- FWC Commissioner Charles Roberts put his support behind CCA Florida’s STAR Tournament formation about various habitat projects around the state, as well as some powerful graphics showing the economic impact of recreational anglers on the state economy. While we all know a bad day of fishing is better than a good day of working, a good day of telling fish stories with the leaders of our state government is hard to beat! Congratulations to the CCA Florida Advocacy team and to all of the volunteers who made this day possible! FWC Commissioner Brian Yablonski discusses his long relationship with CCA Florida 10 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 Capt. Rick Murphy, Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam and Sandy Safley gear up for the STAR press conference Governor Rick Scott stopped by to trade fishing stories. Pictured here: Brian Gorski CCA Florida Executive Director, Governor Rick Scott, Capt. Rick Murphy,Trip Aukeman CCA Florida Director of Advocacy and FWC Commissioner Charles Roberts S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 11 around the state 12 A New STAR Rises Get ready for the inaugural CCA Florida STAR Tournament presented by Yamaha The CCA Statewide Tournament and Angler’s Rodeo has been a summertime staple for anglers in Texas and Louisiana for many years, and on May 23, anglers in Florida will finally have an opportunity to get in on the action with CCA Florida’s inaugural STAR tournament presented by Yamaha. Thanks to the successful STAR blueprint developed by CCA Texas and CCA Louisiana, Florida has a proven formula, but as Florida’s STAR Tournament Director Leiza Fitzgerald states, Florida is putting its own spin on the tournament. Like the other STAR tournaments, the CCA Florida STAR will run from Memorial Day through Labor Day, allowing for 108 days of competition. By catching one of 80 tagged redfish, anglers can win one of many great prizes including a pick up truck or a boat motor and trailer package powered by a Yamaha motor, like a Contender 22 Sport, Pathfinder 2200 TRS or Hell’s Bay Waterman. Other division prizes in the CCA Florida STAR will include Yamaha motors, Marathon Petroleum gift cards, Power Pole shallow water anchors, Shimano fishing tackle, Raymarine electronics and gift cards – nearly $500,000 worth of prizes total. Perhaps most exciting of all, youth anglers are eligible to win a share of $100,000 in scholarships. The youth division includes kids ages 6 to 17 and will award at least 12 college scholarships. Youth division species include cobia, speckled trout, snook, sheepshead, jack crevalle and ladyfish, giving even the youngest anglers the opportunity to compete for scholarships. By working with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the Florida STAR has added a few unique features of its own, such as the Marathon Petroleum Conservation Division which will help the FWC’s study Florida’s fisheries. FWC’s research arm, the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, is rearing the redfish that will be tagged and released on Florida’s west coast in late May. Each fish caught will help further the science of fisheries management and conservation with the hopes of ultimately improving future hatchery efforts. Conservation is the name of the game, and in the conservation division, anglers will record and share data about all of their catches to give the FWC even more information to better manage the resource. CCA Florida also worked with the Snook and Gamefish Foundation to create its own state-of-the-art smartphone app, which will allow anglers to enter fish right from the boat. The catch-and-photo format is another new wrinkle that allows all fish that are caught to be eligible for prizes. Best of all, prizes are not awarded based on the largest fish of each species.The “Open” category, complemented by categories for kayaks, fly, ladies and youth, and the guide division, which will award prizes for simply signing up STAR entrants, are other distinct features of the Florida STAR. The licensed guides division is designed to recruit more participants and will award $17,500 in prizes to the three guides who register the most anglers for the tournament. “Where most recreational tournaments exclude guides, we wanted to find a way to help the guys and gals who are some of CCA’s best supporters and often our eyes and ears on the water,” said Fitzergald, a licensed charter boat captain who developed the guides division. STAR is a nonprofit tournament focused on attracting people to Florida’s outstanding saltwater resources. It gets families on the water and helps educate all anglers about the importance of conserving and protecting their coastal resources. Last year, Texas, with less than 400 miles of coastline, had 45,000 people fish STAR. By comparison, Florida enjoys more than 1,300 miles of coastline and boasts more than 1.2 million licensed saltwater anglers. With numbers like that, CCA Florida hopes to reach thousands of new anglers every year through the STAR tournament. “This tournament represents the most exciting opportunity in our history to educate the public about Florida’s marine resources and how we can best preserve the future for our children,” CCA Florida Chairman Bill Camp said. Much of the excitement over this tournament stems from the enthusiasm of the sponsors who have provided overwhelming support for the launch of the Florida STAR. “Maverick Boat Company has been an integral part of the success of CCA Florida for more than 25 years, and they have stepped up once again with another donated Pathfinder bay boat,” said Brian Gorski, CCA Florida’s executive director. The newer boat sponsors, Hell’s Bay Boatworks and Contender, have lent incredibly strong support as well. In addition to the boats already donated for Florida’s banquet program, these corporate stewards of our marine resources have each donated a second boat for STAR prizes. Other donors, like Power Pole, Wells Fargo Papa’s Pilar Rum, Florida Sportsman Magazine, Shimano, Raymarine Marine Electronics, Finlandia Vodka and LIVETARGET, have also made significant donations that will go to support scholarships and other prize categories. During its first two years, CCA Florida STAR will release tagged fish on the west S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 State Sponsors Step Up for STAR CCA Florida is proud to announce that four of our major state sponsors have stepped up to support the inaugural CCA Florida Star Tournament presented by Yamaha! As the title implies, Yamaha stepped up in a big way, providing motors for prizes as well as powering all of the boat packages. All three of our boat sponsors stepped up as well with Contender donating a 22 Sport Center Console, Maverick Boat Company donating a Pathfinder 2200TRS and Hell’s Bay Boatworks donating a Waterman! Each package will be complete with a Yamaha motor and custom aluminum trailer! Registered tournament anglers who catch a CCA Florida STAR-tagged redfish will be eligible to win one of these incredible prizes packages. These contributions are in addition to the boats and motors that each company has donated each year! Not only do these organizations produce the finest boats and motors in their categories, but also each one truly understands the importance of giving back and insuring that our marine resources will be around for generations to come. CCA Florida is lucky to be able to count groups like these as our sponsors and friends and we look forward to putting on a successful STAR Tournament with their help! Thank you! coast of the state, providing an opportunity to catch a tagged redfish from Pensacola through the southern reaches of Everglades National Park. After those first two years, Florida expects to expand STAR-tagged fish to the entire state and will potentially include more species. For complete rules and to enter Florida STAR, please visit CCAFLSTAR.com and make plans to get in on the action this summer. S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 13 around the state 14 Historic Banquet in Manatee County Walter Fondren, the founder of CCA, always said, “The bigger the committee, the bigger the dance.” With 23 members, the committee for the CCA Manatee County Chapter just pulled off the biggest “dance” in CCA Florida history! The Conley Buick GMC CCA Florida 16th Annual Manatee County Banquet & Auction, presented by Cannons Marina, set a CCA Florida all-time attendance record at their banquet February 26. They filled every inch of the 32,000-square-foot convention center with 648 attendees and 54 corporate tables.With fundraising totaling over $250,000 this was one incredible banquet. The venue was large enough to accommodate boats from all three state boat sponsors: Contender, Pathfinder and Hell’s Bay Boatworks, plus vehicles and boats from title and presenting sponsors Conley Buick GMC and Cannons Marina. The silent auctions were filled with merchandise from local sponsors including Crowder Brothers Ace Hardware, Ingman Marine and many more. The live auction was jammed with one-of-a-kind trips and merchandise, but the highlight of the night was when Capt. Rick Murphy’s trip to the Bahamas hit the auction block. The trip, which included private airfare along with three days of fishing and accommodations, went to the highest bidder for $11,000, and if that wasn’t good enough, Capt. Rick stepped up and offered to donate a second trip, bringing the total to $22,000 on just one item! Thank you, Capt. Rick! Thank you to all who made this event such a historical success! From the Chapter President, Ron Crowder, and all of his committee members, to each and every guest, sponsor and donor, you should all be proud of your achievement! S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 15 16 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 After over a year of selling tickets, the winner was drawn. Capt. Rick Murphy read the winners information on the ticket stub and knew right away this was going to be S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 a special moment. “If your first name starts with the letter L, please stand” Murphy said to a crowd of over 600 at the Manatee County Banquet. A few dozen people excitedly jumped to their feet. “If your last name starts with the letter G, please continue standing,” Murphy went on, and three people remained, looking on in disbelief. “And if your name is Luis Garcia, you just won a brand new Pathfinder boat courtesy of Maverick Boat Company,” exclaimed Murphy. Needless to say, Luis was thrilled. Over the years, we have given away many boats and other great prizes, but Luis’ reaction was priceless. Jumping on a chair, high fiving the group of friends at his table and celebrating the moment — it was a sight to behold. Luis is a longtime CCA member from the Tampa area and no stranger to Maverick Boat Company products, already owning a Pathfinder. Congratulations, Luis! In all, through the donation of this Pathfinder, Maverick Boat Company helped CCA Florida raise $92,300 to conserve and protect our marine resources. Special thanks to Scott Deal and the entire team at Maverick Boat Company! around the state Lucky Member wins Pathfinder 2200 T RS 17 habitat horizon Taming the Lionfish Lionfish, lionfish, everywhere! In the news, on the reefs (both artificial and natural), in shallow waters and way down deep. You’d think every man, woman and child would know that lionfish are an issue by now, but it’s not so. Many Floridians and visitors to the state have no idea that populations of invasive, non-native lionfish are expanding rapidly in the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico. As a matter of fact, more than half of the visitors to our “Be The Predator” traveling outreach and education booth are not even aware that lionfish are harming our native wildlife and habitat. We can all do our part in helping combat the lionfish issue. After reading this article, share the news with your friends and family. Post an article about lionfish on your Facebook wall. And if you see a lionfish, remove it. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is doing its part, too. This includes a series of regulatory changes that increase your ability to remove lionfish, outreach to inform the public and incentives to increase harvest pressure. We continue to work closely with those who have a stake in the lionfish issue, from fostering long-term partnerships to brainstorming with the public. Have an idea? Email it to us at Saltwater@MyFWC.com. We pledge to continue doing what we can to make sure everyone knows about the lionfish issue and is inspired to act. New Reef Rangers Lionfish Control Program While the dive community is the primary line of defense against the lionfish invasion, we all have a vested interest in protecting our reef systems. For this reason, the FWC is creating new and innovative ways for both divers and non-divers to get involved in lionfish control efforts. In May, the FWC will unveil the new Meet Meaghan! FWC’s New Lionfish Outreach Coordinator I remember clearly the first time I heard about the lionfish invasion. Around the water most of my life and studying marine biology, I was not only surprised, but honestly, I was disappointed in myself for not realizing it was an issue earlier. I saw my first lionfish underwater in June 2012 in Florida Bay. From that moment on, I knew I wanted to be on the front lines combating the invasion. I spent my undergraduate years studying the species and assisting with research on lionfish diet. While I plan to continue researching lionfish, my work as FWC’s Lionfish Outreach Coordinator has allowed me to achieve my goal of effecting change by raising awareness about lionfish. Today, I have the unique opportunity to travel around the state and share information about the lionfish invasion with thousands of people like you. I’m intrigued by your curiosity and amazed by how many people have not heard about the issue. I have also had the opportunity to dive and collect lionfish with some of the most accomplished lionfish hunters and leading lionfish researchers. Learning to hunt lionfish and sharing the latest information has been an awesome experience. When you are in the water, the feeling of responsibility is overwhelming. You have the power to do something about it. Spreading the word about the invasion is not just my job — it’s my passion, and I’m excited to be working with you. Come see me at the FWC “Be the Predator” booth at your local events and lionfish tournaments. I’m happy to answer your lionfish questions. Happy hunting! 18 “Reef Rangers” Lionfish Control Program via a weekend-long blowout event in Pensacola. Think of it like an Adopt-A-Highway program, but instead of cleaning up trash off a local roadway, participants will pledge to conduct regular lionfish removals from specific reefs. Not a diver? No worries, Reef Ranger dive teams will need partners like you to support lionfish removal efforts. It is clear lionfish can and will repopulate a reef after a single harvesting event. Scientific studies have also shown repeated harvesting events are the best way to keep the population of lionfish under control and protect reef ecosystems. Reef Rangers will be the first control program in Florida designed to provide sustained, long-term control, and the first program designed to involve the non-diving community. On top of the good feelings Reef Rangers will get from doing their part, they will be entered into a drawing and eligible for prizes if they submit their data via the Report Florida Lionfish app or MyFWC.com/Lionfish. Report Those Lionfish! Have you reported your lionfish sighting or catch on the new Report Florida Lionfish app? Thanks to your suggestions, the app has undergone some great transformations, including the addition of an interactive map. This map includes all lionfish reports, photos of the fish caught and a reef option so you can look at all of Florida’s artificial reefs. The map is also viewable on MyFWC.com/Lionfish. Other new features include entry slots for largest and smallest fish caught, the ability to submit data without including a photograph and the ability to share your catch on Facebook or Twitter. When using the app, please make sure to enter the exact coordinates for the harvest location and the date you collected them. This information is vital! Sell Those Lionfish! Lionfish harvesters are asking if they can legally sell lionfish to defray the cost of harvest. The answer is “YES!” and the process for obtaining the required Individual Saltwater Products License is very simple. Just visit MyFWC.com/License and click on “Commercial Saltwater Products” and “2014–15 Saltwater Products License Application (with instructions).” Print and complete the application form and mail to the address on the S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 application with a check or money order for $50. The individual SPL also replaces your recreational saltwater fishing license as well as the snook and lobster permits. That’s all there is to it, just remember that this license only allows you to sell to licensed wholesale dealers. If you have any questions, just call the FWC Office of Licensing and Permitting at 850-487-3122. Invite the Lionfish Outreach Team to Participate in Your Event! Have you seen the Be The Predator Lionfish Outreach and Education booth? Lionfish Outreach Coordinator Meaghan Faletti has been all over that state with the booth sharing information about lionfish. Since July 2014, the team has participated in tournaments, festivals and other public S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 events across Florida and discussed lionfish with more than 1,200 people. Visitors to the booth learn about lionfish life history, distribution, population expansion and how our native species and ecosystems are being affected. Visit MyFWC.com/Lionfish and click on “Derbies and Events” to see when the lionfish booth will be at a location near you, or request a no-cost lionfish workshop in your area by visiting MyFWC.com/ Lionfish. You can also reach the Lionfish Outreach and Education team by phone at 850-487-0554. 19 20 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 The Habitat Horizon The objective of CCA Florida is to conserve, promote and enhance our coastal resources for benefit and enjoyment of the general public. For many years, this has meant battling in the trenches against commercial over harvesting of Florida’s marine resources and advocating for strong resource-based management of our recreational fisheries. Many years, many dollars and many man hours were spent advocating against gill nets, long lines, fish traps and other indiscriminate resource killers. Just as many were spent fighting for long-view, conservation-oriented management of Florida’s fisheries. The organization has experienced many victories in those battles and, if recent experience is any indication, those battles will likely continue for many years to come. However, there is a new sun rising at CCA Florida, and it is rising over the habitat horizon. Due to the growth and increased S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 breadth of the organization, habitat restoration issues have become a key focus going forward. Habitat issues are not new to CCA Florida or its members. For more than a decade, hundreds of CCA Florida local chapter members have contributed thousands of volunteer hours and acquired hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding for marine habitat restoration projects. On Florida’s west coast, volunteers have built oyster bars and planted literally hundreds of acres of saltmarsh, sea grass beds and mangroves. On Florida’s east coast, volunteers have restored oyster reefs and planted mangroves along the altered shorelines of Lake Worth and the Indian River Lagoon and built near-shore artificial reefs. Many of these projects were partially or wholly funded through foundation grants acquired by CCA Florida members and from donations by local CCA chapters. habitat horizon By JD Dickenson, CCA Florida Habitat Committee Chairman (continued on page 25) 21 habitat horizon CCA River Reefs by Joe Kistel Two aquatic habitats were built in the St Johns River using recycled materials for the purpose of benefiting the waterway environment while providing a recreational fishing location. The habitats created have been referred to as “Urban Reefs” due to their location proximity to downtown Jacksonville. The project was constructed in December of 2014 and is intended to be the first of many CCA habitat projects in the northeast Florida region. 22 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 The “CCA River Reefs” were physically constructed in two weeks, but it required over three years of preparations to make the habitat projects a reality. This endeavor was the first of its kind in northeast Florida and thus a cookbook type recipe was not yet available to follow. In the beginning, it was not even understood what regulatory bodies would be involved in governing such a project. It took time to get the process rolling, but ultimately it was determined there would be two permitting regulatory agencies. To apply for permitting, several project details needed to be determined including site selection, material and material quanti- S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 ty. The two sites selected were determined to be the most ideal locations to maximize the productivity of the habitat created while also meeting regulatory and local demands. Material chosen to construct the reefs sites was a recycled form of concrete known as “ribbon concrete.” Ribbon concrete is a clean form of concrete that is made from the remaining concrete in a concrete truck after a pour. The aggregate in the material creates an irregular surface texture that aids in maximizing the real estate available for aquatic life to adhere to. The material was broken into random chunk-sized pieces that made it a logistically friendly choice for building the habitat that was intended. This concrete material was generously donated by the Argos Corporation. Our construction plans called for 1,300 tons of concrete material to be deployed between the two permitted habitat zones. Considering the barge capacity was approximately 70-80 tons, we planned for 18 barge load deployments. For each deployment, the barge was spudded into position as precisely as possible. Once in position, material was offloaded on the port and starboard sides of the barge, creating two separate material mounds per drop. Nine barge loads of material were deployed at each reef site. The construction process created piles of habitat structure up to five feet off the river bottom. This generated relief, combined with the vast amount rock-like surface area, is anticipated to create a home for a variety of encrusting organisms. These animals are expected to provide resources in the form of food and additional shelter that will likely support all levels of the regional aquatic food chain. This area of the St. Johns River has historically been was home to eel grass habitat. Environmental factors have changed over the years due to man’s influence, and the eel grass habitat has disappeared. The intent of this project is to mitigate the loss of eel grass habitat with new aquatic habitat that is able to thrive in present conditions. Although we are unable to replace the eel grass, this new habitat will benefit the river system while providing a recreational area that can be utilized by the community. 23 24 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 Habitat Horizon MAY continued from page 21 These past efforts are now being augmented with additional resources and are centrally coordinated through CCA Florida’s statewide Habitat Restoration Committee. Thanks to the leadership of Don Roberts, the committee was officially formed as a State Committee reporting directly to the Chairman of CCA Florida in the summer of 2014 and has been hard at work coordinating and advancing key habitat restoration projects throughout the state. The committee has a vision of a map of the state of Florida that is peppered with completed and in-process habitat restoration projects. We already have an impressive list of completed projects with many more on the horizon. In its short time on the job, the committee has supported and overseen the deployment of a cutting-edge inshore reef in downtown Jacksonville, construction of a near shore artificial reef in South Palm Beach County, in partnership with UCF the continued restoration of oyster and sea grass habitat in the Mosquito Lagoon and the development of a large-scale near-shore reef project off of Walton County. Further, the Habitat Committee is working toward or considering numerous other in process or potential projects including the development of a CCA Florida Foundation dedicated to funding habitat projects, a Tampa Bay oyster reef creation project, a Florida Bay sea grass and salinity related project and many more. None of these projects are possible without the passion and dedication of individual members of CCA Florida. However, there is much more work to be done and the Habitat Committee’s best resource for habitat restoration ideas and manpower is CCA Florida’s membership base. As with many things conservation, it is often about the money. If you have ideas on restoration projects or ideas on funding sources for restoration projects, please reach out to your Regional Director or to any member of the Habitat Restoration Committee. “Of all the questions which can come before this nation, short of the actual preservation of its existence in a great war, there is none which compares in importance with the great central task of leaving this land even a better land for our descendants than it is for us.” Theodore Roosevelt Nowhere is this statement more poignant and more relevant than in Florida. We are all very fortunate to live in a beautiful place with unique marine resources. But it is a place that presents seemingly endless challenges and risks to the health of the very natural resources that make it beautiful to begin with. It is for that reason that CCA Florida has made habitat restoration a key part of its mission. It is a testament to the growth and good management of this organization that CCA Florida can now effectively fight the critical commercial gear and resource access battles with one arm, while advancing the organization’s habitat restoration goals with the other. I am proud to serve on CCA Florida’s Habitat Restoration Committee, and I am excited about our ability to conserve, promote and enhance our coastal resources through habitat projects. Enjoy the view of the Habitat Horizon. Broward Banquet Thursday, May 7 This event is held at the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame! Do we need to say more? Enjoy one of the coolest venues around the state and a great meal by Texas Cattle Company. Tickets are just $100 per person or $175 per couple. Corporate and reserved tables begin at $875 for a table of 10. For more information, please contact Matt Behm at 561-644-2788 Lake Banquet Thursday, May 14 Held at the beautiful Lake Receptions in Mount Dora, this event is one you will not want to miss. Tickets are $65 per person or $120 per couple. Corporate and reserved tables begin at $1,100 for a table of 8. For more information, please contact Tina Sonnenfeld at 352-978-1553 or Adam Miller at 941-270-0895 Big Bend (Tallahassee) Banquet Thursday, May 21 The Big Bend Banquet will be held at the National Guard Armory. The banquet committee is betting this event will rival all its predecessors, so join us for this expectedly epic affair! Tickets are $85 per person or $160 per couple. Corporate and reserved tables begin at $800 for a table of 8. For more information, contact Caitlin Mitchell at 334-391-2232 CCA Florida STAR Tournament Begins Saturday, May 23 Register now for the inaugural CCA Florida STAR Tournament presented by Yamaha. At just $30 for current CCA members, you need to enter this tournament. Anglers will be competing for nearly $500,000 in prizes! Register online at CCAFLSTAR.com. For more information, contact Leiza Fitzgerald at 352 665-4868 JUNE www.calusa.com S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 Inter Chapter Challenge (ICC) Friday & Saturday, June 26 & 27 The 12th Annual CCA Florida Inter Chapter Challenge is scheduled for June 26 and 27 at River Palm Cottages and Fish Camp in Jensen Beach. The 2014 ICC set an all-time record with over 175 anglers! The ICC was started in 2004 to bring members together from all over the state to share ideas, talk about their individual chapters and have a great day on the water. This is a great event for the entire family! The ICC is a photo all-release tournament and the Alex Jernigan Grand Champion is based on the team’s total inches of their largest snook, redfish and trout. Please visit ccaflorida.org to download the complete rules and entry list. For more information, please contact Brian Gorski at 941-720-4446 25 FWC Law Enforcement Update Commissioner Profile Adrien Bo Rivard The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is responsible for many things in order to achieve their stated mission: “Managing fish and wildlife resources for their long-term well-being and the benefit of people.” Law enforcement is a primary focus in that mission.We all understand that without strong enforcement, the rules and regulations we work so hard to pass do nothing. CCA Florida is proud to continue our regular feature in Sea Watch; The FWC Law Enforcement Update. Please remember you can do your part by reporting all fish and wildlife violations to the FWC at 888-404-FWCC (3922) Cellular phone users, call *FWC or #FWC. Adrien Bo Rivard of Panama City was appointed to the Commission on March 8, 2013 by Gov. Rick Scott. Rivard has been a partner with Harrison Rivard Duncan & Buzzett since 2002 and is the past-president of the Bay County Chamber of Commerce. He has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Florida and a law degree from Samford University. Commissioner Rivard’s term expires Aug. 1, 2017. Law Enforcement Case Anglers Encouraged by New of There’s the Week nothing like hands-on exRecreational Fishing Policy perience when it comes to training for a job. When officers are fresh out of our FWC academy, they must go through a 16-week on-the-job training period with a Field Training Officer. Some of the lessons learned and cases made may become some of their most memorable! New officer Nick Korade, shown here, and his FTO, Officer Lee Yates, were patrolling a tidal creek when they came across a significant fisheries violation. Some individuals were keeping extra redfish (the bag limit is 2 per person in that area), including 10 that were undersized. All subjects were issued notices to appear. Citation Issued Officer Ward stopped a fisherman in northeast Volusia County and found him to be in possession of 22 black drum. A citation was issued, and 17 drum were seized and donated. 26 Saltwater anglers welcomed the announcement of the National Saltwater Recreational Fisheries Policy, which was rolled out at the Progressive Miami International Boat Show. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service announced the policy during a press conference headlined by its top administrator, Eileen Sobeck. “This is a major step in the right direction,” said Jeff Angers, president of the Center for Coastal Conservation. “For the first time, NOAA Fisheries officially acknowledges the inherent differences between recreational and commercial fisheries — and the need to manage the sectors differently. “The rubber will meet the road in implementation,” he said, “but this is a good roadmap.” The policy identifies goals and guiding principles related to recreational fishing to be integrated — top-down — into NOAA Fisheries planning, budgeting, decision-making and activities. The goals of the policy are to: 1) support and maintain sustainable saltwater recreational fisheries resources, including healthy marine and estuarine habitats; 2) promote saltwater recreational fishing for the social, cultural, and economic benefit of the nation; and 3) enable enduring participation in and enjoyment of saltwater recreational fisheries through science-based conservation and management. Recreational anglers and boaters identified their primary priorities in the Commission on Saltwater Recreational Fisheries Management’s report “A Vision for Managing America’s Saltwater Recreational Fisheries.” The commission, headed by Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris and Maverick Boats President Scott Deal, highlighted six key policies that would achieve the commission’s vision. Establishment of a national policy for recreational saltwater fishing was its No. 1 recommendation. Other key elements include adoption of a revised approach to saltwater recreational fisheries management; allocating marine fisheries for the greatest benefit to the nation and creating reasonable latitude in stock rebuilding timelines. Contributors to the work of the Morris-Deal Commission include the American Sportfishing Association, the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, the Berkley Conservation Institute, the Center for Coastal Conservation, the Coastal Conservation Association, the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation, International Game Fish Association, the National Marine Manufacturers Association, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership and The Billfish Foundation. S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 S E AWAT C H • FA L L 2 0 1 0 27 28 S E AWAT C H • S P R I N G 2 0 1 5