Wicker, Cochran Support Disaster Recovery Grant for Miss. Fisheries
NOAA Awards State $10.9 Million for Commercial Oyster & Blue Crab Fisheries Disasters
February 26, 2014
WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) today said they are optimistic that $10.9 million in disaster assistance awarded to Mississippi will help the state’s commercial oyster and blue crab industries recover from setbacks caused by flooding in 2011.
Wicker, a member of the Senate Commerce Committee, and Cochran, a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, supported the January passage of the FY2014 omnibus appropriations bill that provided fisheries disaster funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to support recovery from fisheries disasters declared by the Department of Commerce in 2012 and 2013.
“I am grateful that Mississippi fishermen are receiving the assistance they need to rebuild their lives after devastating flooding,” Wicker said. “This is a positive step toward restoring the losses of local fishermen and the state’s vital fishing industry.”
“These NOAA resources will help the Mississippi Gulf Coast overcome recent and serious setbacks,” said Cochran, who worked with his Appropriations Committee colleagues to secure support for responding to recent fisheries disasters. “The livelihoods of many who rely on a healthy Gulf have been harmed by recent disasters. Historic flooding on the lower Mississippi, when combined with 2010 oil spill, undoubtedly shrank oyster and blue crab harvests in the Mississippi Sound.”
The Commerce Department issued a federal fisheries disaster declaration for commercial oyster and blue crab fisheries in Mississippi in September 2012. The fisheries were harmed when extraordinary levels of freshwater flowed into the Mississippi Sound after the Bonnet Carre Spillway in Louisiana was opened by the federal government in May 2011 to relieve historic flooding on the lower Mississippi River.
According to NOAA, Mississippi will determine how to use the funding to “restore the fishery or prevent a similar failure in the future and to assist a fishing community affected by such failure.”
The NOAA funding to alleviate damage to the oyster population could include reef cultivation, clutch planting and water quality improvement programs. Funding to restore the blue crab fishery could be used for habitat restoration projects, derelict trap removal programs and the crab trap Terrapin Excluder Device program.