Date:   Tue, Apr 27, 2004, 9:18 AM

RE:   Press Release-Regs

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News from The NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
For more information: Maureen Wren, (518) 402-8000

STATE ANNOUNCES CHANGES TO 2004 RECREATIONAL FISHING REGULATIONS

Revisions Done to Comply With Federal Requirements to Reduce Harvests for 3
Species

ALBANY, NY -- (04/26/2004; 1300)(EIS) -- The New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation (DEC) today announced changes in 2004
recreational fishing regulations for summer flounder (fluke), scup (porgy)
and black sea bass. The new regulations, which are effective immediately,
are as follows:

-- Fluke: minimum length - 17 inches, possession limit - 3, open season -
May 15 to September 6.

-- Porgy: minimum length - 11 inches, possession limit - 20, open seasons -
June 16 to October 17 and November 1 to 30.

-- Black sea bass: minimum length - 12 inches, possession limit - 25, open
season - January 1 to September 22 and October 8 to December 31.

These changes supercede 2003 regulations which included: for fluke: minimum
length - 17 inches, possession limit - 7, open season - all year; porgy:
minimum length - 10 inches, possession limit - 50, open season - all year;
black sea bass: minimum length - 12 inches, possession limit - 25, open
seasons - January 1 to September 1 and September 16 to November 30.

New York State participates in the cooperative management of migratory
marine fisheries under the Interstate Fishery Management Program of the
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC). Under that program,
ASMFC adopts Interstate Fisheries Management Plans (FMP's) for individual
species or groups of fish. Under the provisions of the Atlantic Coastal
Fisheries Cooperative Management Act (ACFCMA), ASMFC determines if states
have implemented provisions of FMP's in a timely manner. If ASMFC
determines a state to be in non- compliance with an FMP, the Commission
notifies the U.S. Secretary of Commerce. If the Secretary concurs in the
non-compliance determination, the Secretary promulgates and enforces a
complete prohibition on all fishing for the species in the waters of the
non-compliant state until the state comes into compliance with the FMP.

Under the FMP for fluke and porgies, ASMFC assigns each state an annual
harvest target or quota. The state's harvest for the upcoming year is
projected, assuming regulations remain the same and that harvest patterns
and rates remain the same as the previous year. If the projected harvest
exceeds a state's assigned quota, the state must, as an FMP compliance
requirement, make its harvest regulations sufficiently more restrictive to
prevent exceedance of its quota. ASMFC reviews, and must approve, each
state's regulations as compliant with the FMP.

New York's projected porgies and fluke harvest for 2004 exceed the State's
assigned quotas by 58 percent and 48.5 percent, respectively. The
regulatory changes in the emergency rule announced today achieve a 58
percent reduction for porgies, and a 20 percent reduction for fluke. DEC is
proposing to ASMFC that the New York 2004 recreational harvest projection
for fluke be based on an average of the estimated harvest for 2001-2003,
rather than on 2003 alone. New York's fluke regulations were essentially
unchanged over this three year period, and the recreational harvest
estimate, which is derived from a federal survey that is not statistically
reliable at the individual state level, has fluctuated significantly over
the period. In particular, the 2003 harvest estimate is more than double
the estimate for the two preceding years, which conflicts with information
provided by New York's marine recreational fishing industry regarding the
levels of fishing business and angler success in 2003. For this reason, DEC
has chosen to comply with the FMP by basing its harvest projection on a
more reliable and stable three year average of harvest estimates, resulting
in a 20 percent reduction requirement for 2004.

The FMP for black sea bass calls for annual adjustments to common coastwide
regulations that are calculated to hold coastwide harvest within the
allowed annual quota. For 2004, a two- week closure between September 1 and
October 31 is required, with a recommended closure of September 6 - 21. The
emergency rule announced today changes the current closure period from
September 1 - 16 to September 23 - October 7. This change is implemented to
minimize the economic impact on New York's recreational fishing operations
from potentially closing both the fluke and black sea bass immediately
following Labor Day.

Marine fishing regulations can be viewed on the DEC website at:
http://www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/marine/finfish/swflaws.html . For
additional information about the regulations, contact DEC Marine Resources
Division at 631-444-0436

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