Natural Resources Wales Board Ignores 83% Consultation Response
and Supports Mandatory Catch and Release of Salmon
Anglers reacted in dismay when the Board of Natural Resources
Wales supported its executive’s proposals for imposition of mandatory 100% catch
and release for salmon anglers throughout Wales at a meeting on January 18th.
The Board will now recommend to Welsh Government that this is implemented
with effect from the 2018 fishing season, ignoring the 83% of respondents to
the public consultation who did not agree with the catch and release
proposals.
Angling’s representative body, the Angling Trust, has written to
Welsh Government urging it to adopt a voluntary approach to catch and release
salmon angling in line with the Environment Agency in England and to address
urgently the real reasons for the decline in salmon populations in Wales,
which are pollution and unsustainable predation by cormorants and goosanders.
The Trust highlighted the fact that Welsh Government is
currently taking a voluntary approach to the regulation of agricultural
pollution, which is in stark contrast to the tough line on anglers, who are
not responsible for the decline in stocks. It also pointed out that
several major pollution incidents in the past two years, which have killed
far more salmon and sea trout than all the anglers in Wales catch in an
entire year, have still not led to prosecutions by Natural Resources
Wales. The Angling Trust has in recent years repeatedly called for an
urgent action plan to tackle pollution and unsustainable predation by
cormorants and goosanders but very little has been done on either issue.
The NRW board acknowledged that it had lost the trust of the
angling community and that 83% of respondents to the consultation were
opposed to the catch and release proposals. They were rightly concerned
that the new rules would be unenforceable due to a loss of support from
anglers, who act as the eyes and ears of NRW for offences on the riverbank.
The NRW Chair Diane McCrea stressed the need for urgent action
to restore rivers to good health. Many anglers feel that Welsh
Government and NRW are seeking to destroy angling after recent proposals to
open all rivers to canoes and other vessels, an abject failure to promote
angling to tourists by Visit Wales and a failure by NRW to recognise the
importance of angling to the economy and society of Wales.
Mark Lloyd, Chief Executive of the Angling Trust & Fish
Legal, said: “The blame for declining stocks of salmon and sea trout lies
firmly at the door of Natural Resources Wales and Welsh Government for their
mismanagement of the environment. It is grossly unfair to make
criminals of anglers wanting to take the occasional fish home for their
family while they allow polluters to pour poisons into rivers on a regular
basis and fail to prosecute serious offenders. These proposals will
drive away visiting anglers and destroy the amenity value of fishing for
thousands of local anglers who have fished these rivers all their
lives. We demand urgent action to tackle pollution and unsustainable
predation and urge Welsh Government to take a voluntary approach in line with
the Environment Agency in England.”
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Saturday 27 January 2018
Just another case of I/We told you so.
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