The Arizona Republic

Feds cancel protection for endangered whales

Administra­tion rejects rule proposed by fish industry

- ELLEN KNICKMEYER

SAN FRANCISCO - The Trump administra­tion on Monday threw out a new rule intended to limit the numbers of endangered whales and sea turtles getting caught in fishing nets off the West Coast, saying existing protection­s were already working.

Economical­ly, the new rule would have had “a much more substantia­l impact on the fleet than we originally realized,” said Michael Milstein, a spokesman with the federal fisheries service, which killed the rule.

The rule would have applied to fewer than 20 fishing vessels that use mile-long fishing nets to catch swordfish off California and Oregon.

The change would have shut down the drift gillnet fishing for swordfish for up to two seasons if too many of nine groups of whales, sea turtles or dolphins were getting caught in the nets.

The Pacific Fishery Management Council, which includes representa­tives of the fishing industry as well as state and tribal government­s and federal regulators, had proposed the rule in 2015.

Rejecting it, the National Marine Fisheries Service decided that safety measures already taken by the fishing industry, such as putting pinging warning devices on the nets that could be heard by some of the creatures, were working to drasticall­y cut the numbers of whales and turtles becoming tangled in the nets, Milstein said.

Environmen­tal groups protested Monday’s decision.

Catherine Kilduff, an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity environmen­tal group, said any accidental harm to endangered communitie­s of humpback whales and leatherbac­k turtles would be particular­ly dangerous given their low numbers — as low as 411 for one group of humpbacks.

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