| #61 | ||||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences Quote:
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| #62 | |||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences just a couple of ideas for the politicians how about a licence for going to the match,the gym,work, the shop,getting born,dont stop on sea fishing theres money to be made here |
| #63 | |||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences what do all you members in other countries think of our petty squables with our politicians? |
| #64 | ||||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences government have backed down on this issue toady due to NFSA pressure ![]() dave __________________ www.exmouthsaa.co.uk litter is lazyness 24 beers in a case and 24 hours in a day,coincidence or good planning |
| #65 | ||||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences Hopefully that will be the end of it. |
| #66 | ||||
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| Where did you hear that Dave? |
| #67 | ||||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences was a press release passed on, will try to find __________________ www.exmouthsaa.co.uk litter is lazyness 24 beers in a case and 24 hours in a day,coincidence or good planning |
| #68 | ||||
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| Re: Sea Fishing Licences Just got this from the countryside alliance.... On Tuesday, Defra Minister Jonathan Shaw announced that, following months of consultation, plans to introduce sea-angling licences would not be pursued. The decision was announced following a Parliamentary Question from Martin Salter MP, spokesman for fishing and supporter of the sea angling licence proposal. The Countryside Alliance has campaigned against the proposals for sea-angling licences since they were first introduced under the Marine Bill. The idea that sea anglers, alone amongst all coastal users, should fund the upkeep of coastal car parks (amongst many other plans) was clearly nonsense; at the time we branded the proposals "unenforceable, bureaucratic and with no obvious benefit to the recreational sea angler" and that view appears to have been accepted by our political masters. The Government's decision to drop the proposal in the face of mass opposition is a victory for the entire angling community. Sea-angling licences always threatened to be just another layer of bureaucracy. Once the administration of the licence had been paid for, conservation of fish stocks would have received precious little funding. After all, how was the upkeep of coastal car parks ever going to boost fish stocks? We always felt the licence would have been unenforceable around our thousands of miles of coastline. The future of fish stocks around UK shores will depend on proper management of commercial fisheries, not charging anglers to fish in the sea whilst spending the income on more besides. Muddling the relationship between marine conservation and tourism is a dangerous path to tread. Inshore angling licences are ring-fenced to aid conservation and are a successful story of which the Environment Agency can be proud. Ring-fencing sea angling licence revenues was not touted as an option, leading us to believe that sea-angling would be taxed merely because it was possible and not because it was fair or sensible. There are over 2,500 miles of coastline around England and Wales, and the notion that the coast could be policed, and licences enforced, is ludicrous. After all, the sea angling industry is already worth £538 million to the economy - let's not make sea anglers pay more than their already huge contribution to the health of the rural economy. Throughout the ongoing consultation the Alliance has fought against these proposals, and we are gratified on behalf of the sea angling community that the Government has listened to the concerns of sea anglers everywhere and opted for reason over recklessness. Simon Hart Chief Executive |