Thursday, December 21, 2017

"Historic" agreement reached to better protect Lake Erie yellow perch stocks off Lake County

In a protracted and hard-fought campaign that spanned years, yellow perch anglers achieved an historic agreement that will effectively close the placing of commercial trap net gear over a 130-square mile swath of Lake Erie off Lake County.

This agreement – voluntary but still embedded in strong intent – was inked between Lake County sport anglers, the two commercial trap net fishermen who are the most inclined to commercially fish the region, and the Ohio Division of Wildlife.

Under the three-year agreement - retro-active to the 2017 commercial fishing season - the trap netters will be prohibited to set gear using these officially accepted dimensions: “The eastern border of this closed zoned (sic) is four nautical miles east of the Fairport Harbor (West Breakwater) lighthouse running due north and south the northern border is eight miles from (the) Fairport Harbor (West Breakwater) lighthouse and runs due east and west, the southern border is the shoreline combined with grids 913’s northern boundary, and the western border is defined by the western boundaries of the commercial grids 713 and 813.”

In practical effect, the new off-limits trap net unit will begin just west of the Chagrin River near Willowick, east to the now defunct Rayon production plant in Perry Township and importantly, north of the prized sport and commercial fishing grounds known locally as the “Hump.”

Previously, the trap netting exclusionary zone was a four-mile arc pivoting from the mouth of the Grand River at Fairport Harbor.

Though the Wildlife Division preferred that the delineation be an arc, backers of the movement said a square is much easier for anglers to understand when using their GPS nits.

Conflicts over use of the Hump – which was roughly divided in half by two of the Wildlife Division’s Lake Erie fisheries management units – arose between commercial and recreational interests. These included access to the area’s stock of adult fish as well as any potential harm that the setting of nets might do on spawning or breeding-staging adult yellow perch.

Ensuring recreational angling access only would exist for the Hump was a primary focus of a local ad hoc committee that worked the political spectrum, lobbied the Wildlife Division and engaged area fishing clubs and individual anglers.

“Everyone will benefit from the commercial fishermen to the sport fishermen to the yellow perch,” said Don Schonauer. “Hopefully the little perch will grow and the bigger ones will spawn.”

Schonauer is widely regarded as the spear point of the angler-driven campaign committee that consisted on-and-off of about 50 individuals. He unveiled the project and the group’s achievement at a December 21st meeting held at River Bend Marina in Fairport Harbor and attended by about 75 to 100 people.

Schonauer said as well that anglers may seen positive results as quickly as next year. However, the document’s full impact very well may take several years to bear fully mature fruit, Schonauer said.

“I want everyone to remember, it was not the netters’ fault; they were doing only what the law allowed,” Schonauer said as well. “But when yellow perch fishing is good that helps everyone in the business. If you don’t have perch than you’re hurting and I should know; I ran a bait store.”

Though while Schonauer may be a gifted Lake Erie angler himself, a small businessman and a presidential-award-winning retired school administrator, he readily admits he’s neither a politician nor a lobbyist. But he is a quick learner and that included tapping into those elected officials who know their way around the hallways and offices of state government.

“As a businessman I do not want to see anyone lose their job but things must be fair and balanced,” said Ohio State Representative Ronald Young. “Clearly that had not been the case here.”

Young, said Schonauer at the public forum, was instrumental in successfully navigating the agreement package through the labyrinth of state government bureaucracy, political indifference, and general government foot-dragging.

“I believe that this agreement is historic; it’s simply never been done before,” Young said.

Then again, Young still carried a big stick as he talked softy to the Kasich Administration and officials with the Wildlife Division. That axe handle comes in the form of his House Bill 356 which would impose some serious and new restrictions on commercial fishing off both Fairport Harbor as well as Sandusky – the bread and butter region for the state’s small commercial fishing fleet.

Should the agreement collapse, said Young, it would take almost nothing to revive his legislative proposal.

“This cycle of closing or restricting one management unit and opening another and then reversing that has to stop,” Young said. “Something ought to be done on a lakewide basis, too.”

Heavily assisting also in the project was local businessman and Lake County Board of County Commissioners President Jerry Cirino who more than one year ago pledged his support to Schonauer.

A hard-nosed negotiator himself, Cirino tramped the halls of state government in Columbus and then stalked the offices of leaders with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources at the agency’s Columbus campus.

Cirino cautioned that as a voluntary agreement its points are “fragile” but that officials with the Wildlife Division and the commercial fishing community came around to a package “that is as good as it can possibly be” for yellow perch anglers.

“Sport anglers were at a terrible and serious disadvantage, and it took a while for the Wildlife Division to recognize this, but it is now aboard with the idea,” said Cirino.

Cirino then added with a wink a moment latter: “We can make yellow perch fishing in Lake County great again.”


- Jeffrey L. Frischkorn
JFrischk@Ameritech.net

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