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2007 Press Releases
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2008 Press Releases

FishAmerica Foundation Receives Contribution from Johnson Outdoors
7/28/2008

Congress Restores 35-Year EPA Recreational Boating Exemption
7/24/2008

Educators Give “Top Marks” to National Fishing and Boating Training
7/24/2008

Youth Angle for Success with “Angel” Anglers
7/24/2008

ICAST 2008 Continues Tradition as World’s Largest Sportfishing Trade Show
7/22/2008

Sportfishing Industry Awards 2008 “Best of Show” Honors
7/18/2008

The Top 10 Products That Transformed an American Pastime
7/16/2008

Summer School Features Fishing
7/2/2008

Sportfishing Industry Trade Show Sold out for Seventh Straight Year
6/30/2008

ASA Elects Board of Directors Members
6/26/2008

Sportfishing Industry Supports Restoring Cape Hatteras Seashore Access
6/12/2008

Sportfishing and Boating Community Honors Steadfast Supporter
6/4/2008

Cape Hatteras National Seashore Settlement Detrimental to Sportfishing
5/1/2008

Sportfishing Industry Takes Action to Keep Flounder Fishery Open to Fishing
4/30/2008

California’s Anglers and Boaters Score Victory in No-Fishing Process
4/23/2008

Sportfishing Industry Contributes to Summer Flounder Fishery Research
2/28/2008

Grants Available for Sportfish Habitat Restoration
1/22/2008

Physh Ed Fishing and Boating Program Extends Grant Application Deadline
1/22/2008

Report Highlights Fishing’s Broad Economic and Conservation Impact
1/8/2008

Press Release

Sportfishing Industry Supports Restoring Cape Hatteras Seashore Access
by Mary Jane Williamson

June 12, 2008, Alexandria, VA—The American Sportfishing association applauds the introduction of legislation (S. 3113 and H.R. 6233) that would restore reasonable off-road vehicle (ORV) access to Cape Hatteras National Seashore Recreational Area (CHNS). The legislation, introduced on June 11, by Senators Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) and Richard Burr (R-NC) and Representative Walter B. Jones, Jr. (R-NC), would reinstate the Interim Management Strategy governing off-road vehicle use on CHNS. The reinstatement of the original Interim Management Strategy (IMS), issued by the National Park Service (NPS) on June 13, 2007, would set aside the mandates and requirements established by a consent decree filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina that prevents off-road vehicle and citizen access to a significant portion of the seashore.

The consent decree, which went into effect on May 1, 2008, was the result of a lawsuit filed by Defenders of Wildlife and the National Audubon Society. The lawsuit contended that the IMS did not provide adequate protection for area shorebirds. The provisions of the consent decree outline a series of management measures that are much more restrictive than the IMS and put in place protections for shorebirds that far exceed protections used at other national seashores and outlined in species recovery plans. As a result, access to a vast majority of the CHNS was closed.

“Unfortunately, the provisions of the consent decree are placing an undue and possibly disastrous economic burden on the local community,” said ASA Vice President Gordon Robertson. “ASA strongly supports statements made by Rep. Jones,” continued Robertson. “The consent decree has shown that managing the Seashore through the courts—without public input—will have unintended consequences. The bill would restore much needed reasonable public access while still providing necessary and adequate protections for the shorebirds.”

“The shorebirds thrived last year under the Interim Management Strategy,” added Patty Doerr, ASA Ocean Resource Policy director. “The unnecessary protections added by the consent decree only resulted in severely impacting the local economy, which is heavily dependent on beach tourism and ORV access. This bill will go a long way towards a more common-sense approach to ORV management in the seashore.”

If enacted, the National Park Service’s Interim Management Strategy will go into effect immediately and end upon the National Park Service establishing a long-term off-road vehicle management plan for the use of CHNS by the public.

A 1972 Executive Order called on all federal land management agencies to develop ORV plans wherever ORVs are permitted. While draft plans for Cape Hatteras were developed, a plan was never finalized. In an attempt to avoid litigation, the Department of the Interior proposed the use of a Negotiated Rulemaking Committee to develop the plan. Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne formally approved the committee in December 2007. Stakeholders were told that the negotiated rulemaking process would avoid litigation.

The American Sportfishing Association (ASA) is the sportfishing industry’s trade association, committed to looking out for the interests of the entire sportfishing community. We give the industry a unified voice, speaking out on behalf of sportfishing and boating industries, state and federal natural resource agencies, conservation organizations, angler advocacy groups and outdoor journalists when emerging laws and policies could significantly affect sportfishing business or sportfishing itself. We invest in long-term ventures to ensure the industry will remain strong and prosperous as well as safeguard and promote the enduring economic and conservation values of sportfishing in America. ASA also represents the interests of America’s 40 million anglers who generate over $45 billion in retail sales with a $125 billion impact on the nation’s economy creating employment for over one million people.