
Senate panel advances fishing cooperative bill with electronic monitoring
The Alaska Senate Resources Committee voted unanimously Monday to advance legislation legalizing commercial fishing cooperatives for set gillnet permit holders, after adopting amendments that add electronic monitoring requirements and cap cooperative size.
The committee approved House Bill 117 with two amendments. The bill allows two or more set gillnet entry permit holders to pool their operations, a practice currently prohibited under Alaska law but already occurring in some fisheries.
The first amendment authorizes the Alaska Department of Fish and Game commissioner to establish electronic monitoring programs for vessels participating in state commercial trawl fisheries. The monitoring would apply only to vessels already equipped with federal electronic monitoring systems for Gulf of Alaska, Bering Sea, or Aleutian Islands fisheries.
"This amendment deals with the trawl fishery, the state commercial trawl fishery, and it gives the Department of Fish and Game, the commissioner, the ability to establish and manage an electronic monitoring program for vessels participating in a state commercial trawl fishery," said Senator Bill Wielechowski, who introduced the amendment.
The amendment would not require vessel owners to purchase or install new electronic monitoring equipment. It applies only to vessels that already have the equipment on board for federal fisheries. The provision takes effect January 1, 2027.
Commissioner Doug Vincent Lang said the department supports the electronic monitoring provision. "It adds another important tool in the toolbox for us to use in managing Alaska's fisheries," Vincent Lang said. He noted that Alaska statutes currently provide authority only for onboard observers, with no provision for electronic monitoring.
The department had introduced broader electronic monitoring legislation in 2024 that received feedback it was too broad. The amendment before the committee has narrower scope, limiting the program to vessels with existing federal monitoring systems.
"I certainly support this amendment," said Representative Louise Stutes, the bill's sponsor. "I think the fact that it is specifically tailored so that the electronic monitoring can only be required when you are engaged in trawl fishing in state waters, I think that is important."
The second amendment caps cooperative size at five permits until the Board of Fisheries establishes maximum sizes for each administrative area through regulation. The cap addresses concerns raised by Bristol Bay fishermen about potential consolidation.
"This amendment addresses those concerns by capping the number of people that may fish as one cooperative at five permits until such time as the regulation package is passed in that administrative area," Wielechowski said.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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