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Stop the Dangerous Privatization of Oceans!

Target: Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council
Sponsored by: Food and Water Watch
It’s hard to imagine there is an entire industry out there dedicated to privatizing the vast, wild oceans, and threatens the livelihood of Gulf Coast fishing families.

How? The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council is trying to set up the path for a dangerous new industry: commercial-scale fish farming in our oceans.

This largely untested industry threatens the safety of our food, hurts the marine environment, and endangers the livelihood of fishing communities that depend on healthy wild fish to make a living.

The council has been operating under the radar. Let them know they are being watched and that you care about our oceans and our health.

Tell the Fishery Management Council that fishing communities and the public need more time to weigh in. Sign the petition and help stop the giveaway of our oceans!
deadline: 10-18-2008
goal: 15,000
 

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Dear Gulf Council:

I am very concerned about the developing plan for commercial ocean fish farming in the Gulf of Mexico. As-is, the plan does not adequately address the effects of industrial ocean fish farming on public health, the Gulf environment, and local fishing communities.

I strongly urge you to provide the American public the opportunity to engage on this important issue by providing another comment period and holding regional workshops so people will better understand open ocean aquaculture and what it will mean to their lives. While open ocean aquaculture has been a topic of discussion at the Council for some time, the current plan was only first debuted in January 2007, and has been whisked through the Council process in less than a year, with little publicity.

In particular, I am worried that the Council plan does not:
- Have strict environmental requirements about pollution and harm to habitat and wildlife
- Prevent farming of endangered or threatened species and species of concern
- Protect essential habitat and fishing grounds by requiring buffer zones around special or fragile places
- Require compensation for exclusionary use of public resources for private profit
- Prevent using oil rigs for aquaculture
- Talk about how increasing aquaculture can hurt other marine wildlife by using more prey species in feed

These are all extremely important issues that must be addressed before any aquaculture permits are even considered in the Gulf of Mexico. I strongly urge the Council to review the developing plan for ocean fish farming very carefully before moving forward, and to provide another comment period and regional workshops. A poorly or hurriedly designed open ocean aquaculture plan could have unintended consequences. There is no reason to rush to finalize an incomplete plan.

[Your comment]

Sincerely,
[Your name]
[Your address]
We signed the “Stop the Dangerous Privatization of Oceans!” petition!
# 250:
10:10 am PDT, Oct 24, Name not displayed, New York
# 249:
10:10 am PDT, Oct 24, Name not displayed, Maryland
# 248:
10:10 am PDT, Oct 24, Virginia Van Norden, Connecticut
# 247:
10:10 am PDT, Oct 24, Barbara Cassar, New York
# 246:
10:10 am PDT, Oct 24, Beth Barol, Pennsylvania
# 245:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Alice Sather, Minnesota
It is true that the ocean provides a wealth of resources for us - but we need to guard how we use them, rather than exploit them. This is one resource we have a chance to preserve before we really make a mess of things.
# 244:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Jennifer Lewis, California
# 243:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, David Warkentin, California
# 242:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Claude Wilson, Ohio
# 241:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Dawn Garcia, Minnesota
# 240:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Deborah Willis, California
# 239:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Xenia Zarrehparvar, California
We need to start thinking ahead instead of two steps back. Please consider the future!
# 238:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Rod Ries, California
# 237:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Debbie Moore, Massachusetts
# 236:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Linda Holing, California
# 235:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Christienne Budge, Rhode Island
Stop this before it starts. Send a message!
# 234:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Stacey Schrager, Florida
# 233:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Lisa Koehl, Connecticut
Oceans belong to EVERYONE. Just as this world does. We need to learn to care and to share!!!!!
# 232:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Steven VanScoy, Florida
# 231:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Jean Merritt, New York
# 230:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Daniel Shively, Pennsylvania
# 229:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, David Keenan, Michigan
# 228:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Mari Gorzenski, Michigan
# 227:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Emily Bachhuber, Minnesota
Preserve our oceans' integrity!
# 226:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Sybil Carter, Illinois
# 225:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Nancy Armao, New York
# 224:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Gregory Krolczyk, Florida
# 223:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Peter Bedard, California
# 222:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Devon Carson, California
# 221:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, MARY SULAIMAN, Texas
THIS IS AN ABOMINABLE IDEA BY GREEDY INDUSTRY. FOR EVERYONE'S SAKE, DON'T DO THIS. IT'S WRONG.
# 220:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Kathy Ryan, Virginia
# 219:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Jessica Doerre, Wisconsin
# 218:
10:09 am PDT, Oct 24, Matthew Aarsvold, California
# 217:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Giovanni Garcia-Fenech, New York
# 216:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Calyn Smoot, Texas
# 215:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Eliot Kaplan, Washington
# 213:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Ines Castro, Maryland
# 212:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Name not displayed, Wisconsin
# 211:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Sue Roberts, Florida
# 210:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Nettie Engel, Oregon
# 209:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Kristin L. White, Massachusetts
# 208:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Alicia Tunby, North Carolina
# 207:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Susan Parker, Massachusetts
# 206:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Michael Sackar, Illinois
# 205:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Joseph Farrington, North Carolina
# 204:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, William Vinett, Tennessee
# 203:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, Ines Doti, California
# 201:
10:08 am PDT, Oct 24, James Corcoran, Georgia
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