Arno Ewing fishes commercially for black sea bass out of Edgartown.
Ray Ewing

State Proposes Extending Commercial Fishing for Sea Bass, Striped Bass, Summer Flounder

After a slow start to the summer, the state Division of Marine Fisheries has proposed extensions to the commercial striped bass, black sea bass and summer flounder seasons, hoping to add additional fishing days and adjust catch limits for fishermen as fall approaches.

After a slow start to the summer, the state Division of Marine Fisheries has proposed extensions to the commercial striped bass, black sea bass and summer flounder seasons, hoping to add additional fishing days and adjust catch limits for fishermen as fall approaches.

The DMF is proposing to add Tuesdays and Thursdays to the commercial striped bass season starting Sept. 1. The agency is then planning to add Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays starting Oct. 2 — which would allow commercial striped bass fishing every day of the week.

A similar change has been proposed for the black sea bass fishery, with DMF planning to add Mondays and Wednesdays in September and expand the season to seven days per week in October. The DMF is also proposing to increase the commercial pot limit from 400 to 500 pounds per week.

Sorting the catch for sale at Edgarown Seafood. With quotas still not met, the state is proposing an extension to the fishing season this year.
Ray Ewing
Sorting the catch for sale at Edgarown Seafood. With quotas still not met, the state is proposing an extension to the fishing season this year.
Ray Ewing

The DMF also wants to increase the summer flounder limit from 400 to 600 pounds for trawlers on August 23, then expand to 1,000 pounds come Oct. 4 and eliminate all closed fishing days.

A public comment period for the proposed changes is now open. Comments can be addressed to DMF director Dan McKiernan and can be submitted by email at [email protected].

In-season extensions to the state’s commercial fishing limits are routine during late summer, when the state assesses the season’s catch relative to remaining quota numbers.

But the Covid-19 pandemic has caused particular hardship for commercial fishermen this summer, challenging their ability to get on the water and creating new difficulties for the sale and offloading of catch. The DMF said in a release Monday that the pandemic factored into the proposal to extend the striper, sea bass and summer flounder seasons - especially as all three were currently well below their allowed seasonal quotas.

“In response to fishery performance and quota utilization so far in 2020, and with consideration of market impacts resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic, DMF is proposing in-season adjustments to 2020 commercial fishing limits for striped bass, black sea bass, and summer flounder,” the release said. “The purpose of proposed actions is to provide active commercial fishermen with additional access to these quota managed fisheries during the fall. This will let these businesses fish around worsening seasonal weather, which typically has a limiting impact on commercial fishing effort. They will also allow for commercial fishermen to have greater access to remaining quotas.”

As of August 1, 2020 approximately 25 per cent of the state’s 735,240-pound 2020 striped bass quota had been taken, 20 per cent of the state’s 728,565-pound 2020 black sea bass quota had been taken and 48 per cent of the 786,399-pound 2020 summer flounder quota had been taken, the release said.

Earlier this year, with striped bass stocks dwindling, the DMF lowered the commercial quota by approximately 100,000 pounds from 2019 levels. The decline in striped bass stock has occurred precipitously in recent years. After reaching quota in from 2009 through 2017, the commercial striper fishery only landed 88 per cent of its quota in 2018. In 2019 that number dipped to 67 per cent, according to numbers on the DMF website.

By this time last year, striped bass fishermen had landed approximately 50,000 more pounds of striped bass than 2020 numbers.

In mid-winter, the storied Martha’s Vineyard Striped Bass and Bluefish Derby made the decision to remove striped bass from the 2020 competition, citing the decline in striped bass stock and conservation efforts to preserve the species.

Commercial black sea bass fishermen have reached their quota every year since 2019, according to numbers from the DMF. The quota was dramatically expanded in 2020, from approximately 530,000 pounds to 728,000 pounds.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 12:45

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Bob Edgartown

Tell me this is an April fools joke. Because they are not catching as many striped bass because there are not as many they’re going to extend the season. They need to make striped bass a game fish and end the commercial season altogether. We have taken bass out of the Derby to try to protect them not so that commercial people can make money off of them.

Chris oak bluffs

Couldn't agree more Bob... extending the commercial Striped Bass season is pure stupidity. Numbers are way down, we need to think intelligently and preserve Striped Bass for the future. No need to have a commercial season at all in my opinion.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 14:24

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Paul perkins Bethany beach

Haven't caught stripped bass or rock fish all year. They should protect them again. lower commercial limits.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 14:30

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Dave Buzzards Bay

I whoLe hardly agree with Bob.
Just about every tournament has been canceled, including mine, THE STAN GIBBS CAPE COD CANAL FISHERMANS CLASSIC , due to our respect of the species.
If anything needs doing, let's cull the seal population.
Adding to the commercial fishing season is an alarmingly BAD idea. Most of the commercial landing is shipped to New York anyways.
As I see it, we can make a few dollars now and possibly deplete the species OR we can have our children's children enjoy fishing for Bass.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 14:30

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Teddy S.Jersey

All Business should be treated equally. How can you leave out the recreational boats.They have bills to pay also.Sometimes I wonder about the one's who makes decision in this state! !

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 14:49

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George Osing

I don't understand the logic here at all. If the stocks are down the fishing should be decreased not increased!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 14:53

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CPt RJ Green Hsrbor

Absolutely ridiculous why no just let them catch them all and be done with it !!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 15:35

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Richard North Carolina

I agree with Bob. Striped bass, red drum, and speckled and grey trout should be declared recreational only! The summer flounder is so over stressed it may never recover now and increasing commercial limits will make things worse. But here in NC, politics prevail. Our DMF is appointed by our Democrat governor and is numerically and intentionally kept one sided favoring commercial fishing. He even got the commercial fishermen 11.5 million dollars for the flounder they didn't catch due to the hurricane. In Massachusetts, North Carolina or anywhere on this country, if a fish stock is in distress it should be placed in closed season. FOR EVERYONE! Especially commercial interests. In NC a few hundred commercial flounder fishermen haul in over 3 million pounds while the DMF votes to close the recreational season. This year the DMF decides to allow recreational fishing Aug 16 Sept 30. But they have a commercial season October and November when all the flounder gather in the sounds to migrate into the sea. I thought we were the only ones who got a one sided political deal, but you people in Massachusetts are getting a raw deal too. The DMF in every state in controlled by politicians and the resource does not have a chance. The commercial guys drag their nets through our rivers, bays, and sounds trapping and killing tens of thousands of juvenile flounder, and oh well it is just by catch. Just a price we all have to pay so a few can profit. Remember the American Bison? The Labrador Duck? Carolina parakeet? Passenger pigeon? All decimated and either extinct or severely depleted by commercial interest. Waterfowl would have been shot to extinction be commercial gunners years ago if the Federal government had not stepped up and said enough!! Only two states have stepped up so far. Florida and Louisiana. After getting the DMF under control, Flounder, Red Drum and Speckled and Gray trout have rebounded by millions. NC is now so politically corrupt it is nearly hopeless. Massachusetts beware! If you are a recreational fisherman you will lose your right so the commercial interest can get a profit.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 18:19

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Phil Long Island

Increase limits? That’s CRAZY TALK!
Theses species are under pressure already, and there are no restaurants to sell to because of COVID restrictions.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/11/2020 - 20:33

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Real fish Captain Boston

The new regs are a joke. One side of the mouth says we need to preserve the breeding stock yet you let the commercial season slaughter the 35" and up fish. The quota is down due to lack of fish, not the covid excuse. Get out there and fish and then get a handle on what is going on. Make some regs that make sense, like a universal Striper bag limit instead of this independent state bs regs. Why do you think they could fill the quota years ago within a month catching 1m+ lbs... because there were plenty of fish unlike today with a reduced quota that can barely be met. Time to make a change at the helm.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/12/2020 - 11:14

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Nelson Sigelman Vineyard Haven

For or against, it is all well and good to sound off in the newspaper but it is important to participate in the public hearing process that is part of fisheries management decision-making. Complaining that it does no good as an excuse is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The Division of Marine Fisheries will accept public comment through August 24.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/12/2020 - 12:37

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Great blue heron Denver

Political insanity.Time for catch and release on these species until they recover. Also time to cancel the Martha's Vineyard derby and not risk infecting the island residents with covid from out of staters. Wait till vaccine

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