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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap Quote: 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap You either learn to how to work inside the machine to influence it and make a difference or work outside it and make peripheral noise here or other places to no avail. There are times for both.  I've been on both sides of this and can say without a doubt working inside the machine although sometimes frustrating and can wear you out, has gotten more results then trying to make changes outside of it. That's my perspective.. Your mileage based on your perspective, circumstances, your willingness for patience and comprise may vary. It's like any relationship. I've had my moments of throwing in the towel since things did not go my way but this is a marathon and not a sprint.. Merry Christmas and stay thirsty my friends... | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap why is it so hard????,just use more common sense.you kill the breeders,you have no offspring.you take all the forage you have no fish.you have open season during spawning you have poor spawning.why do we need graphs and data when the answers are right in front of us.i guess it just me,FOUR!!!! | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap While I agree a seat at the table gets you in the game, what a person does with that seat is what matters most.  I heard that speech from Adam 7 years ago, I didn't believe it then and I don't believe it now. How many years should someone be given before their presence makes a difference, 20 years? Patience you say, the recreational sector has been waiting patiently for over 20 years for something to break in these fisheries that would provide future benefits for the decades of sacrifices we've all made. What have those benefits been because people don't see any and they don't see any because there haven't been any. Adam opposed regulations which would have reduced commercial harvest, why would he do that as commercial operations are at the heart of every fisheries problems. Recall the post that Massachusetts allows their commercial quota filled with primarily female breeders 36" and greater, why is that allowed as historically low recruitment is one of the primary problems threatening the stocks future. People are tired of political rhetoric and BS and the two fisheries you're giving a member credit for fighting for the recreational sector are not only in the shitter, they're in the shitter on their watch while the recreational share of those stocks has been slashed over the years. Wait two years for more data and time to analyze that data, that's all we've been doing since MSA was adopted in 1976. Lack of data isn't the problem, ignoring the massive amounts of data already available is. Let me take you back 7 years when we met for dinner in Brielle with Jim Hutchinson Jr., Greg Hueth, Dave Arbeitman, Nick Cicero and a few other key recreational players to review the power point presentation I put together for the RFA. It was filled with data and based on massive amounts of research, and that was 7 - 8 years ago. Jim Donofrio categorized the presentation as "The best representation of the stock and data he has ever seen". So much so it was published in RFA's Making Waves in the Spring 2017 edition and subsequently in the Fisherman Magazine. Where did it go from there? Adam wouldn't touch it and ultimately others because it rocked the boat with and challenged status quo management by NMFS, ASMFC and MAFMC personal agendas, politics in other words. Corrupt political institutions don't get better with patience, they become more corrupt. Dales529, you've said to me no less than a few dozen times, "no one says your work is wrong, they simply don't want to admit its right because by default they'd be admitting their policy decisions over the last 2-3 decades have been wrong". As Capt. Ron said, time to get the pirate flags ordered because if we're not willing to fight for our share of a public resource, we will lose these resources forever and I'm &*^%$%! tired of listening to the same BS over and over again as should everyone else. Gerry remember when you walked up to the podium in Galloway in 2017 / 2018 and said "Enough is Enough", why almost eight years later are you praising anyone involved with the disastrous results management has delivered since. ASMFC and MAFMC should clean house as they've been completely compromised in their values and until that happens nothing will change. Recruitment has hit 50 year lows, seasonal closures are imminent so let's wait two more years before addressing the problem.......brilliant management strategy! | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap Quote: 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap 1 Attachment(s) Connecticut State Environmental Conservation Police · On Tuesday December 17, 2024 two EnCon officers and K9 Luna were patrolling the Housatonic River for striped bass poaching activity. Officers located a group of six anglers fishing. As the officers watched, they observed an angler climb the riverbank, climb over the guard rail, run across the road, and enter a steep wooded hill side on the opposite side of the road, disappearing into the woods. The angler appeared to be carrying something heavy. After a few minutes the angler returned to the riverbank empty handed and continued to fish. Contact was made with the anglers, two had no fishing license. They claimed to have caught and retained no striped bass. K9 Luna was deployed on leash along the roadside and requested to search the wooded hill side. She located four separate bags of striped bass each buried in the ground and covered with leaves, the bags spanned a 75 yard long stretch of roadside. In total there were 34 striped bass, all ranging from 12.5” to 25” in length, in violation of the striped bass slot limit which is 28” to 31”. The anglers had 64 striped bass violations and two license violations. They were issued fines totaling $4,974.00. All fish were seized and donated to a non-profit wildlife rehabber. Connecticut Fish and Wildlife. | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap so we have finally graduated to arguing with common sense,we really have come a long way. | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap Bill,it as easy as this"Money talks and bs walks".as long as the wheels keep getting greased,then we get what we get.it is funny though,that we live in a country that is suppose to be ruled by and for the people but is ruled by the wine,dine and pocket lined. | 
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 Re: Dec 16th ASMFC Striper Meeting Recap Quote: 
 What I do know is we can't continue abusing these resources and expect them to be around for generations to come and enjoy both commercially and recreationally. We've done it for decades if not centuries so it can be done. We'd all be losing something very precious if these stocks disappear. Commercial and recreational interests can co-exist and flourish but not the way these stocks are being managed currently. If decisions don't start being made with the health of the stock in mind and a long-term lens, I'm very concerned as I think most of us are we're causing irreparable harm to the future of many of these stocks. Right now we have the fox guarding the chicken coop, that has to change. All these groups are acting on behalf of their own best interests and not the best interests of stocks first and both the commercial and recreational sector second. The problem as you said is money talks, bullshit walks and there's too much money involved in this multi hundred million dollar industry and too many greedy bastards involved in this process to think they'll ever start making decisions to actually manage these stocks for the long-term as opposed to lining their own pockets. That's exactly why I believe litigation in some form is the only hope for the future. | 
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