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North Coast Environmentalists Ask Brown to Cancel MLPA Initiative
Governor Schwarzenegger appointed an oil lobbyist, real estate executive, marina developer and other corporate interests to preside over the implementation of so-called marine protected areas on the California coast. This process has been characterized by conflicts of interest, corruption and the violation of numerous state, federal and international laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.
Photo: In yet another example of a corporate environmental NGO greenwashing the deplorable environmental legacy of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Beautiful Earth Group on December 9 gave Schwarzenegger the 2010 Green Governor of the Year Award. From left to right: Beautiful Earth Group President and Chief Executive Officer Lex Heslin, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Opportunity Green Co-founder Karen Solomon and Americas Region of Beautiful Earth Group Director Michael Clayton. Photo courtesy of the Governor's Office.
Photo: In yet another example of a corporate environmental NGO greenwashing the deplorable environmental legacy of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Beautiful Earth Group on December 9 gave Schwarzenegger the 2010 Green Governor of the Year Award. From left to right: Beautiful Earth Group President and Chief Executive Officer Lex Heslin, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Opportunity Green Co-founder Karen Solomon and Americas Region of Beautiful Earth Group Director Michael Clayton. Photo courtesy of the Governor's Office.
North Coast Environmentalists Ask Brown to Cancel MLPA Initiative
by Dan Bacher
John and Barbara Stephens-Lewallen, two of Mendocino County's most dedicated and respected environmental leaders, are asking Governor-elect Jerry Brown to terminate Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's widely-contested Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative.
"We ask you to cancel the illegal and unconstitutional memorandum of understanding signed under the Schwarzenegger administration transferring powers of the State of California to the Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, a private foundation, to control the process of creating Marine Protected Areas in California State lands and ocean waters under the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative," the Philo-based couple stated in a letter to Brown.
"The corrupt, privatized Marine Life Protection Act Initiative process scorns state laws and sovereign tribal rights," they wrote. "Marine Protected Areas enacted under the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative threaten great environmental and economic harm to present and future generations of Californians."
"Please act to cancel the memorandum of understanding with Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, and to nullify the Marine Protected Areas already enacted by this corrupt private process. Californians need and deserve access to sustainable food from our public ocean waters and intertidal zone. We do not consent to being governed by private foundations," they concluded.
The Stephens-Lewallens have fought offshore oil drilling, the clear cutting of forests, military testing, wave energy projects and other threats to coastal ecosystems for decades. John was the co-founder of the Ocean Protection Coalition and Seaweed Rebellion, two prominent grassroots environmental organizations.
The Marine Life Protection Act, signed by Governor Gray Davis into law in 1999, was designed to create a comprehensive network of marine protected areas along the California coast. However, the Schwarzenegger administration, in a grotesque parody of marine "protection," has taken water pollution, oil drilling, oil spills, military testing, wave energy projects, habitat destruction and all other uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table.
Schwarzenegger appointed an oil lobbyist, real estate executive, marina developer and other corporate interests to preside over the implementation of so-called marine protected areas on the California coast. This process has been characterized by conflicts of interest, corruption and the violation of numerous state, federal and international laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.
During the annual fisheries forum at the State Legislature in Sacramento in April 2009, It was John who exposed the alarming role that a top oil industry lobbyist, Catherine Reheis-Boyd, now the president of the Western States Petroleum Association, was playing in the MPLA process.
“Why is Catherine Reheis-Boyd, CEO and Chief of Staff for the Western States Petroleum Association, a key member of the five-member MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force which has decreed new zones where people can take no food from state waters?” Stephens-Lewallen asked the Senators and Assemblymembers. “Is it coincidence that the Point Arena Basin offshore from Point Arena is the area of highest oil industry interest in Northern California, and the only tract here now open to Minerals Management Service offshore oil leasing process?"
In August of 2009, Reheis-Boyd in fact became the chair of the South Coast MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force and also served on the North Coast task force. Isn't having a oil industry lobbyist, who has repeatedly called for new drilling off the California coast, a huge conflict of interest?
The movement against the privately-funded MLPA Initiative is one of the most significant grassroots political movements on the North Coast since the Redwood Summer of 1990. On July 21, over 300 people including members of 50 Indian Tribes, recreational anglers, commercial fishermen, immigrant seafood industry workers and environmentalists peacefully took control of the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force (BRTF) meeting in Fort Bragg to demand that the initiative respect tribal gathering and fishing rights.
Under political pressure from the Yurok Tribe and other North Coast Tribes, the task force decided on Thursday, December 10 not to approve a motion that would have effectively terminated Tribal gathering and fishing rights.
The Tribes, fishermen and environmentalists insisted that there be no changes to the unified marine protected area proposal developed by stakeholders in a long, grueling and controversial process. The Klamath and Coastal Justice coalitions launched a campaign to urge the panel to stop any attempt to deny tribal subsistence and ceremonial rights – and this political pressure, along with a strongly worded letter by Yurok Tribal Chair Thomas O’Rourke and a letter from a coalition of other North Coast Tribes, apparently worked.
The North Coast proposal will be presented to the Fish and Game Commission on February 2, 2011, after Governor-Elect Jerry Brown takes office.
Meanwhile, the Commission (FGC) in Santa Barbara on December 15 voted 3-2 to approve a wide-ranging array of marine protected areas (MPAs) along the southern California coast. The Central Coast and North Central Coast marine reserves are already in place.
“We hope that sovereign tribal rights will stay in the forefront of the MLPA process,” said Georgiana Myers, organizer for the Klamath Justice Coalition and Yurok Tribal member. “This should be true in every region that is impacted by the MLPA, especially on the North Coast. We will be organizing people to show up in numbers for the Commission meeting in February."
Brown has to date made no comment on his position on the MLPA Initiative, a process that Governor Schwarzenegger privatized in 2004. While NRDC, the Ocean Conservancy and other big environmental NGOs avidly support the privately funded process, grassroots environmentalists, fishermen, Tribal members and pro-democracy activists strongly oppose the corrupting influence of private Resources Legacy Fund Foundation money on a public process.
The MLPA process was privatized by the same Governor who presided over the unprecedented collapse of Central Valley chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, green sturgeon, Sacramento splittail and other fish species, relentlessly campaigned for the construction of an environmentally destructive and enormously expensive peripheral canal and new dams and vetoed numerous laws protecting fish, water and the environment.
by Dan Bacher
John and Barbara Stephens-Lewallen, two of Mendocino County's most dedicated and respected environmental leaders, are asking Governor-elect Jerry Brown to terminate Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's widely-contested Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative.
"We ask you to cancel the illegal and unconstitutional memorandum of understanding signed under the Schwarzenegger administration transferring powers of the State of California to the Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, a private foundation, to control the process of creating Marine Protected Areas in California State lands and ocean waters under the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative," the Philo-based couple stated in a letter to Brown.
"The corrupt, privatized Marine Life Protection Act Initiative process scorns state laws and sovereign tribal rights," they wrote. "Marine Protected Areas enacted under the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative threaten great environmental and economic harm to present and future generations of Californians."
"Please act to cancel the memorandum of understanding with Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, and to nullify the Marine Protected Areas already enacted by this corrupt private process. Californians need and deserve access to sustainable food from our public ocean waters and intertidal zone. We do not consent to being governed by private foundations," they concluded.
The Stephens-Lewallens have fought offshore oil drilling, the clear cutting of forests, military testing, wave energy projects and other threats to coastal ecosystems for decades. John was the co-founder of the Ocean Protection Coalition and Seaweed Rebellion, two prominent grassroots environmental organizations.
The Marine Life Protection Act, signed by Governor Gray Davis into law in 1999, was designed to create a comprehensive network of marine protected areas along the California coast. However, the Schwarzenegger administration, in a grotesque parody of marine "protection," has taken water pollution, oil drilling, oil spills, military testing, wave energy projects, habitat destruction and all other uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table.
Schwarzenegger appointed an oil lobbyist, real estate executive, marina developer and other corporate interests to preside over the implementation of so-called marine protected areas on the California coast. This process has been characterized by conflicts of interest, corruption and the violation of numerous state, federal and international laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.
During the annual fisheries forum at the State Legislature in Sacramento in April 2009, It was John who exposed the alarming role that a top oil industry lobbyist, Catherine Reheis-Boyd, now the president of the Western States Petroleum Association, was playing in the MPLA process.
“Why is Catherine Reheis-Boyd, CEO and Chief of Staff for the Western States Petroleum Association, a key member of the five-member MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force which has decreed new zones where people can take no food from state waters?” Stephens-Lewallen asked the Senators and Assemblymembers. “Is it coincidence that the Point Arena Basin offshore from Point Arena is the area of highest oil industry interest in Northern California, and the only tract here now open to Minerals Management Service offshore oil leasing process?"
In August of 2009, Reheis-Boyd in fact became the chair of the South Coast MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force and also served on the North Coast task force. Isn't having a oil industry lobbyist, who has repeatedly called for new drilling off the California coast, a huge conflict of interest?
The movement against the privately-funded MLPA Initiative is one of the most significant grassroots political movements on the North Coast since the Redwood Summer of 1990. On July 21, over 300 people including members of 50 Indian Tribes, recreational anglers, commercial fishermen, immigrant seafood industry workers and environmentalists peacefully took control of the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force (BRTF) meeting in Fort Bragg to demand that the initiative respect tribal gathering and fishing rights.
Under political pressure from the Yurok Tribe and other North Coast Tribes, the task force decided on Thursday, December 10 not to approve a motion that would have effectively terminated Tribal gathering and fishing rights.
The Tribes, fishermen and environmentalists insisted that there be no changes to the unified marine protected area proposal developed by stakeholders in a long, grueling and controversial process. The Klamath and Coastal Justice coalitions launched a campaign to urge the panel to stop any attempt to deny tribal subsistence and ceremonial rights – and this political pressure, along with a strongly worded letter by Yurok Tribal Chair Thomas O’Rourke and a letter from a coalition of other North Coast Tribes, apparently worked.
The North Coast proposal will be presented to the Fish and Game Commission on February 2, 2011, after Governor-Elect Jerry Brown takes office.
Meanwhile, the Commission (FGC) in Santa Barbara on December 15 voted 3-2 to approve a wide-ranging array of marine protected areas (MPAs) along the southern California coast. The Central Coast and North Central Coast marine reserves are already in place.
“We hope that sovereign tribal rights will stay in the forefront of the MLPA process,” said Georgiana Myers, organizer for the Klamath Justice Coalition and Yurok Tribal member. “This should be true in every region that is impacted by the MLPA, especially on the North Coast. We will be organizing people to show up in numbers for the Commission meeting in February."
Brown has to date made no comment on his position on the MLPA Initiative, a process that Governor Schwarzenegger privatized in 2004. While NRDC, the Ocean Conservancy and other big environmental NGOs avidly support the privately funded process, grassroots environmentalists, fishermen, Tribal members and pro-democracy activists strongly oppose the corrupting influence of private Resources Legacy Fund Foundation money on a public process.
The MLPA process was privatized by the same Governor who presided over the unprecedented collapse of Central Valley chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, green sturgeon, Sacramento splittail and other fish species, relentlessly campaigned for the construction of an environmentally destructive and enormously expensive peripheral canal and new dams and vetoed numerous laws protecting fish, water and the environment.
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The author of this article writes for a commercial fishing sports magazine funded with advertisements from those who make their living from sports fishing. REAL fishermen and REAL environmentalists support MLPA because it will stop the depletion of our fisheries in California.
Officials from Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s fast-track Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative and their supporters keep repeating the mantra that the process is "open, transparent and inclusive" and "science-based" as part of a well-funded propaganda campaign to greenwash Schwarzenegger's abysmal environmental legacy before he leaves office.
The proponents of the process refuse to address the many criticisms that advocates of true ocean protection have leveled against the MLPA Initiative. I have challenged MLPA proponents to answer a series of hard questions that cut to the core of the current MLPA process.
None have responded yet to my specific questions, but only continue to repeat their unsubstantiated claims that the Initiative is “open, transparent and inclusive” and that anybody who criticizes the initiative is an opponent of “ocean protection.”
The Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) is a comprehensive, landmark law that was signed by Governor Gray Davis in 1999. The MLPA, as amended in 2004, is very broad in its scope.
The law was intended to not only restrict or prohibit fishing in a network of “marine protected areas,” but to restrict or prohibit other human activities including coastal development and water pollution.
“Coastal development, water pollution, and other human activities threaten the health of marine habitat and the biological diversity found in California’s ocean waters,” the law states in Fish and Game Code Section 2851, section c.
The law also broadly defines a “marine protected area” (MPA) as “a named, discrete geographic marine or estuarine area seaward of the mean high tide line or the mouth of a coastal river, including any area of inertial or sub tidal terrain, together with its overlying water and associated flora and fauna that has been designated by law, administrative action, or voter initiative to protect or conserve marine life and habitat” (Fish and Game Code 2852, section c).
Furthermore, the law also defines a "Marine life reserve," as “a marine protected area in which all extractive activities, including the taking of marine species, and, at the discretion of the commission and within the authority of the commission, other activities that upset the natural ecological functions of the area, are prohibited. While, to the extent feasible, the area shall be open to the public for managed enjoyment and study, the area shall be maintained to the extent practicable in an undisturbed and unpolluted state” (Fish and Game Code 2852, section d).
However, the implementation of the law under Schwarzenegger has become a parody of real marine protection. The MLPA process under Schwarzenegger has taken oil drilling, water pollution, wave energy development, habitat destruction and other human uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table. The MLPA would do nothing to stop another Exxon Valdez or Deepwater Horizon oil disaster from devastating the California coast.
Here are the questions:
Why did the Governor and MLPA officials install an oil industry lobbyist, a marina developer, a real estate executive and other corporate interests as “marine guardians” to remove Indian Tribes, fishermen and seaweed harvesters from the water by creating so-called "marine protected areas" (MPAS)? Isn’t this very bad public policy?
Why was Catherine Reheis-Boyd, the president of the Western States Petroleum Association, allowed to make decisions as the chair of the BRTF for the South Coast and as a member of the BRTF for the North Coast, panels that are supposedly designed to “protect” the ocean, when she has called for new oil drilling off the California coast? Do we want to see oil rigs off Point Arena, Fort Bragg and other areas of some of the most beautiful coastline of North America?
Why is a private corporation, the shadowy Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, being allowed to privatize ocean resource management in California through a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the DFG?
Why do the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force (BRTF) and Science Advisory Team continue to violate the California Public Records Act by refusing to respond to numerous requests by Bob Fletcher, former DFG Deputy Director, for key documents and records pertaining to the MLPA implementation process?
Why do MLPA staff and the California Fish and Game Commission refuse to hear the pleas of the representatives of the California Fish and Game Wardens Association, who oppose the creation of any new MPAs until they have enough funding for wardens to patrol existing reserves?
Why did MLPA staff until recently violate the Bagley-Keene Act and the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by banning video and audio coverage of the initiative’s work sessions?
Why has the Initiative shown little or no respect for tribal subsistence and ceremonial rights? In fact, it was only because of massive opposition by North Coast Tribes and their allies that an amendment that would have terminated tribal fishing and gathering rights failed to pass during a special MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force teleconference meeting held in Fort Bragg, Crescent City and Eureka on December 9.
Since the MLPA was privatized in 2004, the initiative has violated the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. Article 32, Section 2, of the Declaration mandates “free prior and informed consent” in consultation with the indigenous population affected by a state action (http://www.iwgia.org/sw248.asp).
The MLPA also violates Article 26, Section 3, that declares, “States shall give legal recognition and protection to these lands, territories and resources. Such recognition shall be conducted with due respect to the customs, traditions and land tenure systems of the indigenous peoples concerned.”
The unified proposal adopted by North Coast MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force is the first MLPA proposal that acknowledges tribal gathering and fishing rights, a tribute to the hard work of the Tribal, fishing and environmental stakeholders? However, why did it take 6 years for this to happen?
Why were there no Tribal scientists on the MLPA Science Advisory Team and why were there no Tribal representatives on the Blue Ribbon Task Forces for the Central Coast, North Central Coast or South Coast MLPA Study Regions? Isn't this a case of institutional racism on behalf of MLPA officials?
Why does the initiative discard the results of any scientists who disagree with the MLPA’s pre-ordained conclusions? These include the peer reviewed study by Dr. Ray Hilborn, Dr. Boris Worm and 18 other scientists, featured in Science magazine in July 2009, that concluded that the California current had the lowest rate of fishery exploitation of any place studied on the planet.
Finally, why did 300 Tribal members, fishermen, immigrant workers and environmentalists feel so left out of the MLPA process that they had to organize a march and direct action to take over a MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force meeting in Fort Bragg of July 21 so their voices would be finally heard?
Proponents of the MLPA Initiative have failed to address the many criticisms of the MLPA process by Indian Tribes, recreational fishermen, commercial fishermen, conservationists and environmental justice advocates.
Real environmentalists support true, comprehensive ocean protection as the MLPA originally intended, not the facade of protection that Schwarzenegger's MLPA Initiative provides.
Real environmentalists don't support a process that has gone to great lengths to take oil drilling, water pollution, wave energy development, habitat destruction, military testing and other human uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table in its perverse concept of marine "protection."
Finally, real environmentalists oppose the privatization of ocean conservation that has occurred under the MLPA Initiative.
The proponents of the process refuse to address the many criticisms that advocates of true ocean protection have leveled against the MLPA Initiative. I have challenged MLPA proponents to answer a series of hard questions that cut to the core of the current MLPA process.
None have responded yet to my specific questions, but only continue to repeat their unsubstantiated claims that the Initiative is “open, transparent and inclusive” and that anybody who criticizes the initiative is an opponent of “ocean protection.”
The Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) is a comprehensive, landmark law that was signed by Governor Gray Davis in 1999. The MLPA, as amended in 2004, is very broad in its scope.
The law was intended to not only restrict or prohibit fishing in a network of “marine protected areas,” but to restrict or prohibit other human activities including coastal development and water pollution.
“Coastal development, water pollution, and other human activities threaten the health of marine habitat and the biological diversity found in California’s ocean waters,” the law states in Fish and Game Code Section 2851, section c.
The law also broadly defines a “marine protected area” (MPA) as “a named, discrete geographic marine or estuarine area seaward of the mean high tide line or the mouth of a coastal river, including any area of inertial or sub tidal terrain, together with its overlying water and associated flora and fauna that has been designated by law, administrative action, or voter initiative to protect or conserve marine life and habitat” (Fish and Game Code 2852, section c).
Furthermore, the law also defines a "Marine life reserve," as “a marine protected area in which all extractive activities, including the taking of marine species, and, at the discretion of the commission and within the authority of the commission, other activities that upset the natural ecological functions of the area, are prohibited. While, to the extent feasible, the area shall be open to the public for managed enjoyment and study, the area shall be maintained to the extent practicable in an undisturbed and unpolluted state” (Fish and Game Code 2852, section d).
However, the implementation of the law under Schwarzenegger has become a parody of real marine protection. The MLPA process under Schwarzenegger has taken oil drilling, water pollution, wave energy development, habitat destruction and other human uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table. The MLPA would do nothing to stop another Exxon Valdez or Deepwater Horizon oil disaster from devastating the California coast.
Here are the questions:
Why did the Governor and MLPA officials install an oil industry lobbyist, a marina developer, a real estate executive and other corporate interests as “marine guardians” to remove Indian Tribes, fishermen and seaweed harvesters from the water by creating so-called "marine protected areas" (MPAS)? Isn’t this very bad public policy?
Why was Catherine Reheis-Boyd, the president of the Western States Petroleum Association, allowed to make decisions as the chair of the BRTF for the South Coast and as a member of the BRTF for the North Coast, panels that are supposedly designed to “protect” the ocean, when she has called for new oil drilling off the California coast? Do we want to see oil rigs off Point Arena, Fort Bragg and other areas of some of the most beautiful coastline of North America?
Why is a private corporation, the shadowy Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, being allowed to privatize ocean resource management in California through a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the DFG?
Why do the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force (BRTF) and Science Advisory Team continue to violate the California Public Records Act by refusing to respond to numerous requests by Bob Fletcher, former DFG Deputy Director, for key documents and records pertaining to the MLPA implementation process?
Why do MLPA staff and the California Fish and Game Commission refuse to hear the pleas of the representatives of the California Fish and Game Wardens Association, who oppose the creation of any new MPAs until they have enough funding for wardens to patrol existing reserves?
Why did MLPA staff until recently violate the Bagley-Keene Act and the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by banning video and audio coverage of the initiative’s work sessions?
Why has the Initiative shown little or no respect for tribal subsistence and ceremonial rights? In fact, it was only because of massive opposition by North Coast Tribes and their allies that an amendment that would have terminated tribal fishing and gathering rights failed to pass during a special MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force teleconference meeting held in Fort Bragg, Crescent City and Eureka on December 9.
Since the MLPA was privatized in 2004, the initiative has violated the American Indian Religious Freedom Act and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. Article 32, Section 2, of the Declaration mandates “free prior and informed consent” in consultation with the indigenous population affected by a state action (http://www.iwgia.org/sw248.asp).
The MLPA also violates Article 26, Section 3, that declares, “States shall give legal recognition and protection to these lands, territories and resources. Such recognition shall be conducted with due respect to the customs, traditions and land tenure systems of the indigenous peoples concerned.”
The unified proposal adopted by North Coast MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force is the first MLPA proposal that acknowledges tribal gathering and fishing rights, a tribute to the hard work of the Tribal, fishing and environmental stakeholders? However, why did it take 6 years for this to happen?
Why were there no Tribal scientists on the MLPA Science Advisory Team and why were there no Tribal representatives on the Blue Ribbon Task Forces for the Central Coast, North Central Coast or South Coast MLPA Study Regions? Isn't this a case of institutional racism on behalf of MLPA officials?
Why does the initiative discard the results of any scientists who disagree with the MLPA’s pre-ordained conclusions? These include the peer reviewed study by Dr. Ray Hilborn, Dr. Boris Worm and 18 other scientists, featured in Science magazine in July 2009, that concluded that the California current had the lowest rate of fishery exploitation of any place studied on the planet.
Finally, why did 300 Tribal members, fishermen, immigrant workers and environmentalists feel so left out of the MLPA process that they had to organize a march and direct action to take over a MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force meeting in Fort Bragg of July 21 so their voices would be finally heard?
Proponents of the MLPA Initiative have failed to address the many criticisms of the MLPA process by Indian Tribes, recreational fishermen, commercial fishermen, conservationists and environmental justice advocates.
Real environmentalists support true, comprehensive ocean protection as the MLPA originally intended, not the facade of protection that Schwarzenegger's MLPA Initiative provides.
Real environmentalists don't support a process that has gone to great lengths to take oil drilling, water pollution, wave energy development, habitat destruction, military testing and other human uses of the ocean other than fishing and gathering off the table in its perverse concept of marine "protection."
Finally, real environmentalists oppose the privatization of ocean conservation that has occurred under the MLPA Initiative.
MPAs will not protect fish - Fish move with temperature. Every 20 years fish are forced off shore by El Nino into the factory ships nets. The only thing that used to control that was the roller nets could not access the rock fish who moved to rocks in federal waters - they would rip up their nets. In the nineties mid water nets were introduced and during the El Nino these fished the rocks without the danger of snagging on them. They have nets that are guided by motors and cameras. They overfished ofcourse resulting in the MLPA stuff. Again static parks will not stop the factory ships from reeping the benfits of these MPA nurseries at the expense of local Californians.
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