The U.S. Government Accountability Office just released a report that MARMAM 
subscribers might be interested in. The title is:National Marine Fisheries 
Service - Improvements are needed in the federal process used to protect marine 
mammals from commercial fishing. 
 
The report is available at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d0978.pdf
 
An Associated Press article on the report from January 7, 2009 is pasted below.
 

GAO: Dolphins, whales lack protection from fishing


By HOPE YEN - 4 days ago 

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration has failed to provide protections 
required by law to more than a dozen marine mammals potentially at risk of 
death or injury due to commercial fishing, congressional investigators said 
Wednesday.

The report by the Government Accountability Office assessed the National Marine 
Fisheries Service, which identifies potentially endangered animals such as 
whales and dolphins that can become entangled in fishing gear or lobster traps. 
It found that out of 30 marine mammals deserving protection under federal 
guidelines, the agency had failed to set up teams of experts to provide 
protection for 14 of them.

According to the GAO, the fisheries service was generally aware it needed to 
take protective measures for the additional mammals, which included the 
Hawaiian stock of false killer whales and the Central North Pacific stock of 
humpback whales. But it had not done so because officials said they either had 
faulty data and lacked money to obtain better information, or believed factors 
other than commercial fishing were to blame.

The GAO also said the fisheries service generally lacked a "comprehensive 
strategy" for assessing the effectiveness of its animal protection measures and 
often missed deadlines to set up teams and devise safety plans.

The report urged Congress to have the fisheries service report on any data 
limitations. Lawmakers should also consider steps to ensure the agency complies 
with federal law, it said.

The fisheries service "faces a very large, complex and difficult task in trying 
to protect marine mammals from incidental mortality and serious injury during 
the course of commercial fishing operations," investigators wrote.

The GAO report comes a day after President George W. Bush designated what he 
called "three beautiful and biologically diverse areas of the Pacific Ocean" as 
national marine monuments in what was the largest marine conservation effort in 
history. Bush used his announcement to broadly defend his environmental record.

"For an administration that is desperately trying to create a legacy of ocean 
stewardship before leaving office, it is disappointing to hear that they have 
dropped the ball on reducing incidental deaths of mammals due to commercial 
fishing," said Rep. Nick J. Rahall, D-W.Va. He is chairman of the House Natural 
Resources Committee, which requested the GAO report. 

<http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d0978.pdf> 
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