| Chair
George D. Lapointe (ME)
Vice
Chair
Robert H. Boyles, Jr. (SC)
Executive
Director
John V. O'Shea
|
| Guiding
Documents
|
Legislation
|
| |
|
The
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission was formed by the
15 Atlantic coast states in 1942 in recognition that fish do not
adhere to political boundaries. The Commission serves as a deliberative
body, coordinating the conservation and management of the states
shared near shore fishery resources – marine, shell, and
anadromous – for sustainable use.
Member
states are Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland,
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
Each is represented by three Commissioners:
the director for the state’s marine fisheries management
agency, a state legislator, and an individual appointed by the
governor. Commissioners participate in the deliberations in the
Commission’s five main policy arenas: Interstate
fisheries management, research
and statistics, fisheries science,
habitat conservation, and law
enforcement. The one-state one-vote concept allows Commissioners
to address
stakeholder-resource balance issues at the state level.
The Commission
focuses on responsible stewardship of marine fisheries resources.
It serves as a forum for the states to collectively address fisheries
issues under the premise that as a group, using a cooperative
approach, they can achieve more than they could as individuals.
The Commission does not promote a particular state or a particular
stakeholder sector.
Mission
To promote the better utilization of the fisheries, marine, shell
and anadromous, of the Atlantic seaboard by the development of
a joint program for the promotion and protection of such fisheries,
and by the prevention of physical waste of the fisheries from
any cause.
Vision
Healthy, self-sustaining populations for all Atlantic coast fish
species or successful restoration well in progress by the year 2015.
|