CalOceans News

Showing all articles with tag: north coast MLPA.


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Photos of Noyo's fishing heydey

February 21st, 2012

They say a picture is worth a thousand words, and these historical photos from Noyo Harbor, at the south end of Fort Bragg, tell a more vivid story about Northern California's rich fishing heritage than any list of numbers. The photos show halibut the size of full grown men, and decks overflowing with the day's catch.

Fishing has been a part of the area's way of life for as long as people have lived there. And that is precisely why north coast residents are so intent on protecting their ocean resources.

Fortunately, local fishermen are working alongside conservationists, businesses, tribal leaders and government groups on an ocean protection plantailored for the region's unique socioeconomic and environmental conditions. The Marine Life Protection Act has brought these stakeholders together to plan a system of sea life refuges that balances protection of key breeding and feeding grounds with tribal and fishing access.

The community's marine protected area plan has earned support from state decisionmakers, with some adjustments to accommodate traditional tribal harvest. The plan is expected to be finalized later this year.

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Broad support for north coast's unified MPA plan

October 8th, 2010

After months of careful study and negotiations, north coast stakeholders from a variety of industries and background met on the middle in their final round of marine protected area planning.  The group was the first in Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) history to develop a unified proposal for their region.  The map they agreed on will protect key places like Reading Rock, south Humboldt Bay, and Ten Mile Beach in Mendocino, while minimizing short-term impacts to local harbors and allowing ongoing tribal harvest.

The stakeholders are proud of their plan, which balances the needs of local people and wildlife, weighing both economic and environmental considerations to find the sweet spot.  Six of them signed on to an opinion editorial in the Eureka Times-Standard urging the state to respect their plan.  The signers, who include Aaron Newman of Humboldt
Fishermen's Marketing Association, Tim Klassen of Reel Steel
Sportsfishing, Greg Dale of Coast Seafoods; recreational diver Brandi Easter, Jennifer Savage, of Ocean Conservancy, and Pete Nichols of Humboldt
Baykeeper, represent both fishing and conservation interests, who have come together to make the MLPA work for their communities.

The plan was endorsed by Recreational Fishing Alliance, whose West Coast Regional Director Jim Martin said, "We urge all recreational fishing associations, clubs and organizations
to join us in support of the "Unified MPA Array" by endorsing this
resolution and sending it to the Blue Ribbon Task Force."

You can see the unified proposal and submit comments online at http://www.dfg.ca.gov/mlpa/mpaproposals_nc.asp.

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North Coast MLPA stakeholders produce landmark unified plan

September 1st, 2010

The Marine Life Protection Act’s community-driven approach is bearing fruit in the North Coast, where local stakeholders have agreed to a single unified proposal for a network of marine protected areas that will stretch from Point Arena to the border with Oregon.
 
After a rough start, the 32-member Regional Stakeholder Group (RSG)—which includes harbormasters, surfers, sport and commercial fishermen, seaweed harvesters, tribal and business leaders and conservation representatives—has found common ground. The group agreed to protect key habitat areas like Cape Mendocino, Vizcaino, Pyramid Point, Reading Rock and South Humboldt Bay. There was also unanimous support for ensuring that traditional non-commercial tribal uses can continue.  All protected areas were designed to avoid harbors to ensure safe access to local fishing grounds.

The stakeholders have been working since February to develop a marine protected area plan that would balance ecological and economic concerns.  After over 300 hours of meetings, in addition to 20 public workshops and open houses held throughout the North Coast from Casper to Smith River, the stakeholders settled on this landmark unified plan, the first of its kind in the Marine Life Protection Act process.

While the total area protected under the plan is less than in other parts of the state (the proposal calls for 13 percent of coastal waters to be protected, versus 16 to 20 percent found in other regions, conservationists and fishing groups alike were proud of their achievement.

"Everyone talked about a unified community proposal at the beginning of the MLPA process, but I wasn't expecting to pull it off. Sure enough though, everyone came together and we did it. It's a great accomplishment” said Adam Wagschal, Humboldt Bay Harbor, Recreational and Conservation District Conservation Director.

“The important thing is that we have a unified plan that blends conservation and consideration of the close connection most of us have with harvesting sea life—one our local communities can work together on, for the benefit of the entire region," said Bill Lemos, consultant to NRDC.