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NOAA Update on Gulf Oil Spill
« on: May 03, 2010, 06:02:00 PM »
NOAA Update on Gulf Oil Spill
3 May 2010, 1:13 pm

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

NOAA  Closes Commercial and Recreational Fishing in Oil-Affected Portion of Gulf of  Mexico

NOAA  is restricting fishing for a minimum of ten days in federal waters most affected  by the BP oil spill, largely between Louisiana state waters at the mouth of the  Mississippi River to waters off Florida’s Pensacola Bay (map attached).  The  closure is effective immediately.  Details can be found here: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov/.  Fishermen who  wish to contact BP about a claim should call 800-440-0858.

“NOAA  scientists are on the ground in the area of the oil spill taking water and  seafood samples in an effort to ensure the safety of the seafood and fishing  activities,” said Dr. Jane Lubchenco, NOAA Administrator, who met with more than  100 fishermen in Louisiana’s Plaquemines Parish on Friday night.  “I heard the  concerns of the Plaquemines Parish fishermen as well other fishermen and state  fishery managers about potential economic impacts of a closure. Balancing  economic and health concerns, this order closes just those areas that are  affected by oil. There should be no health risk in seafood currently in the  marketplace.”

“We stand with America’s fisherman,  their families and businesses in impacted coastal communities during this very  challenging time. Fishing is vital to our economy and our quality of life and we  will work tirelessly protect to it,” said Secretary of Commerce Gary  Locke. NOAA is a  bureau of the U.S. Department of Commerce.

The  federal and state governments have strong systems in place to test and monitor  seafood safety and to prohibit harvesting from affected areas and keeping oiled  products out of the marketplace. NOAA Fisheries is working closely with the U.S.  Food and Drug Administration and the States to ensure seafood safety, by  assessing whether seafood is tainted or contaminated to levels that pose a risk  to human health.

“There are finfish,  crabs, oysters and shrimp in the Gulf of Mexico near the area of the oil spill,”  said Roy Crabtree, NOAA Fisheries Southeast Regional Administrator. “The Gulf is  such an important biologic and economic area in terms of seafood production and  recreational fishing.”

According to NOAA, there are 3.2  million recreational fishermen in the Gulf of Mexico region who took 24 million  fishing trips in 2008.  Commercial fishermen in the Gulf harvested more than 1  billion pounds of finfish and shellfish in 2008.

NOAA  is working with the state governors to evaluate the need to declare a fisheries  disaster in order to facilitate federal aid to fishermen in these areas. NOAA  fisheries representatives in the region will be meeting with fishermen this week  to assist them. The states of Louisiana and Mississippi have requested NOAA to  declare a federal fisheries disaster.  BP will be hiring fishermen to help clean  up from the spill and deploy boom in the Gulf of Mexico.  Interested fishermen  should call 425-745-8017.

NOAA  will continue to evaluate the need for fisheries closures based on the evolving  nature of the spill and will re-open the fisheries as appropriate.  NOAA will  also re-evaluate the closure areas as new information that would change the  dimension of these closed areas becomes available.

NOAA  understands and predicts changes in the Earth’s environment, from the depths of  the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and  marine resources. Visit http://www.noaa.gov.

Fishing Tackle Unlimited                                                                        

Source: CCA Texas

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