Glenn
I have to put my hand up and say that I should have posted something about this but have not been well over the winter and have been very lax.
The first point to make is the SACN as well aware of the differences regionally and as such appointed me as the NE co-ordinator to deal with matters arising local. Due to ill health I have not had chance to dedicate time to this position that I should have. I am fully aware that the NE is different in terms of the methods we use and the fish we catch to almost every other region of the Uk.
Secondly the NEsfc has had a very effective angling rep for a while now and yet the position has been vacant for some time up here in the NSFC region .That place has now been taken by me and I intend to try to keep local anglers informed and chase up what is long ignored complaints The problem being is that people do not read the conservation section as a matter of habit. The "vision for the future " link was posted by Leon on 1/2/07 but recieved no comments despite mentioning the introduction of licenses and yet here we are with a very lively thread on the subject.
see:
__________________
Sea Anglers' Conservation Network (SACN)
Conservation & Political News
There are two consultations going on The Marine white paper ( I will add a link when sober) and the vision for the future consultation. Its only when the fact people may have to pay to sea fish that people are actually becoming intrested in conservation issues.
My reading of the white paper for now is that we will have to accept a license on the same basis we accept that fags, booze and petrol goes up every budget. I will fight against any license but one voice against the government just does not work. The good news is we are promised a better say in the way fisheries are run so we need to fight for that en masse...an email to Mr Miliband if you live in south shields saying where your vote may go if he doesn't get it right would help. I live in sedgefield and mine has already gone. (hi Tony if you are reading this)
There are many other suggestions in the white paper that are of benifit to anglers like giving them a gauranteed representation on the SFC's, improving the law making on a local basis, changing the regions covered by the SfC's to even out the regions. For example if you catch a tope and kill it south of the Tyne its illegal...but north of the Tyne its not. Guys in south shields run on rules set in Bridlington but in North shields its set in Cramlington...local is best IMHO. For now the white paper is a proposal for change not a law ...as anglers we need to get together and ensure we have our say.
The third point...I have recieved a copy of the bylaws introduced by the NSFC along with a lot of other papers. Considering that the SFC's have been operating for nearly 200 yrs I was amazed that the bylaws fit on 2 sheets of a4 paper! I expected a delivery by low loader. The local sfc's are inefective and underfunded in their current format...and yet these are the guys we have to rely on to protect our fishing. The proposal in the white paper is to increase funding for the SFC's ( which is currently funded by the local council) to ensure they can perform their duties to the full.
They (nsfc) have a (very expensive) patrol vessel to protect our fishing which currently averages 3 days at sea per week...wonder why this may be. That boat was bought to protect our fish yet is utilised less than 50% of the time...it will be the first question I will ask. I have fished in that region for the last seven years and have rarely seen the patrol vessel and have never been stopped and questioned. One of the first questions I will ask is how is that boat and the inshore one being utilised.
Its taken a lot of hard work by a dedicated few to get RSA's recognised on an official basis...lets not waste the opportunity through apathy thinking someone else will do it . Dont think that a license is uninforcable as they will word it like the coarse license whereby if you are equiped to go fishing for sea fish you need a license...ie they could pull you on the Metro or in the car park and ask to see your license. RSA's make a major contribution to the economy of the country...far more than commercial fishermen do...but a week on tuesday I will be attending my first NSFC meeting representing you and will be sat with 19 other people who are not intrested in the catches of RSA's. What do you want brought up ?
I have the support of both the nfsa and the sacn should I need it to back me up with information and technical support but when it comes down to it I have taken this position to help me catch more fish here off our North East coast..if you catch a few extra as well I would call that a result
Cheers Dave
I have to put my hand up and say that I should have posted something about this but have not been well over the winter and have been very lax.
The first point to make is the SACN as well aware of the differences regionally and as such appointed me as the NE co-ordinator to deal with matters arising local. Due to ill health I have not had chance to dedicate time to this position that I should have. I am fully aware that the NE is different in terms of the methods we use and the fish we catch to almost every other region of the Uk.
Secondly the NEsfc has had a very effective angling rep for a while now and yet the position has been vacant for some time up here in the NSFC region .That place has now been taken by me and I intend to try to keep local anglers informed and chase up what is long ignored complaints The problem being is that people do not read the conservation section as a matter of habit. The "vision for the future " link was posted by Leon on 1/2/07 but recieved no comments despite mentioning the introduction of licenses and yet here we are with a very lively thread on the subject.
see:
__________________
Sea Anglers' Conservation Network (SACN)
Conservation & Political News
There are two consultations going on The Marine white paper ( I will add a link when sober) and the vision for the future consultation. Its only when the fact people may have to pay to sea fish that people are actually becoming intrested in conservation issues.
My reading of the white paper for now is that we will have to accept a license on the same basis we accept that fags, booze and petrol goes up every budget. I will fight against any license but one voice against the government just does not work. The good news is we are promised a better say in the way fisheries are run so we need to fight for that en masse...an email to Mr Miliband if you live in south shields saying where your vote may go if he doesn't get it right would help. I live in sedgefield and mine has already gone. (hi Tony if you are reading this)
There are many other suggestions in the white paper that are of benifit to anglers like giving them a gauranteed representation on the SFC's, improving the law making on a local basis, changing the regions covered by the SfC's to even out the regions. For example if you catch a tope and kill it south of the Tyne its illegal...but north of the Tyne its not. Guys in south shields run on rules set in Bridlington but in North shields its set in Cramlington...local is best IMHO. For now the white paper is a proposal for change not a law ...as anglers we need to get together and ensure we have our say.
The third point...I have recieved a copy of the bylaws introduced by the NSFC along with a lot of other papers. Considering that the SFC's have been operating for nearly 200 yrs I was amazed that the bylaws fit on 2 sheets of a4 paper! I expected a delivery by low loader. The local sfc's are inefective and underfunded in their current format...and yet these are the guys we have to rely on to protect our fishing. The proposal in the white paper is to increase funding for the SFC's ( which is currently funded by the local council) to ensure they can perform their duties to the full.
They (nsfc) have a (very expensive) patrol vessel to protect our fishing which currently averages 3 days at sea per week...wonder why this may be. That boat was bought to protect our fish yet is utilised less than 50% of the time...it will be the first question I will ask. I have fished in that region for the last seven years and have rarely seen the patrol vessel and have never been stopped and questioned. One of the first questions I will ask is how is that boat and the inshore one being utilised.
Its taken a lot of hard work by a dedicated few to get RSA's recognised on an official basis...lets not waste the opportunity through apathy thinking someone else will do it . Dont think that a license is uninforcable as they will word it like the coarse license whereby if you are equiped to go fishing for sea fish you need a license...ie they could pull you on the Metro or in the car park and ask to see your license. RSA's make a major contribution to the economy of the country...far more than commercial fishermen do...but a week on tuesday I will be attending my first NSFC meeting representing you and will be sat with 19 other people who are not intrested in the catches of RSA's. What do you want brought up ?
I have the support of both the nfsa and the sacn should I need it to back me up with information and technical support but when it comes down to it I have taken this position to help me catch more fish here off our North East coast..if you catch a few extra as well I would call that a result
Cheers Dave
Comment