Las Vegas Review-Journal

Court rejects Hawaii fishery expansion

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Caleb Jones The Associated Press

HONOLULU — Federal agencies were wrong to allow Hawaii’s longline swordfish industry to expand fishing efforts while allowing the hooking or entangling of more endangered sea turtles, a U.S. appeals court ruled.

The panel of judges on the 9th

U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled this week that the National Marine Fisheries Service failed to consider scientific data that showed the loggerhead turtle population would decline significan­tly when it set limits for the industry.

The judges also said the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service illegally allowed the industry to kill protected migratory birds.

Swordfish longline fishing involves hundreds of baited hooks on miles of line. The practice can ensnare birds, turtles and other marine life.

Two conservati­on groups in a 2012 lawsuit challenged the rule that doubled limits on how many endangered sea turtles Hawaii’s longline swordfish fishery can hook accidental­ly.

Both agencies are supposed to be protecting wildlife but have “instead been illegally helping the longliners push them to the brink of extinction,” Earthjusti­ce attorney Paul Achitoff said in a statement Thursday.

He represents plaintiffs Turtle Island Restoratio­n Network and Center for Biological Diversity.

The 9th Circuit panel affirmed a separate decision saying another endangered species, leatherbac­k turtles, wouldn’t be jeopardize­d.

The conservati­on groups were disappoint­ed by that, Achitoff said.

“We are reviewing the outcome and have no further comment at this time,” said Jolene Lau, a spokeswoma­n for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. The fisheries service is an office within NOAA.

Hawaii Longline Associatio­n board member Jim Cook said the industry group also will review the case.

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