Title: Scottish Fisheries Management
1Scottish Fisheries Management
- Investigation into Structures for the Management
of Freshwater Fisheries in Scotland
Dr Keith Hendry
2Introduction
- Current Structure
- DSFBs manage own catchments
- DSFBs decision makers within remit of law
- DSFBs implement management action
- Aided by recent development of Trusts
- Salmon Sea Trout only species covered in law
3Objectives
- Investigate potential new structures for the
management of freshwater fisheries in Scotland - Canvas opinion of those involved
- Questionnaire based interview of 20 organisations
representing a variety of public private
fishery related bodies and user groups
4Current Scottish System Positive Aspects
5Current Scottish System Negative Aspects
6Review of Current Scottish System
- Do you agree with the need for a fundamental
review of fisheries management in Scotland?
7Review of Current Scottish System
- Is a unitary body (or group of bodies) with
responsibility for managing all freshwater
fisheries the way forward?
8Areas of Agreement 1.
- Change needed
- Retain good aspects of current system
- Legislation - all freshwater fish in all waters
- Public funding essential in partnership
- Accountability audit for public funds
- Resolve fragmentation geographic scale?
9Geographic scale
Regions
Catchments
In addition, one respondent said local need
should dictate scale
10Areas of Agreement 2.
- Catchment / local management decision making
favoured - BUT
- Number of organisations needs to be reduced and
co-ordination improved
11Areas of Agreement 3. Fragmentation Geography
- Majority lt 25 Boards
- BUT
- 10 most popular choice
- 10 Regions identified by SEPA for WFD
12Management Principles
- Management Regulation Keep Separate
- National or Local Management?
- Federal Model overwhelming support
- Locally delivered decision making management
within National Framework - Public private sector partnerships
- Principle of Public/Private interaction
- Co-Management
13Public/Private Co-Management
Public Sector Influence
Private Sector Influence
14Public/Private Co-Management
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
15Public/Private Co-Management
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
16Public/Private Co-Management
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
17Common Features 1. Proposed Unitary Fisheries
Body(s) Functions?
- Collect Data
- Fish, fisheries their habitats
- Collate, Analyse Supply Information
- Status of all fish species, fisheries habitats
- Undertake Fisheries Management
- Exploitation, stocking, predators, habitat
- Undertake Research
- Local management orientated
- Raise Finance
18Common Features 2.National Umbrella Body
- National Freshwater Fisheries Authority
- Central Hub to oversee management
- High level liaison with SEPA, SNH Govt
- Develop Guidelines for management
- Based on policy legislation
- Formalise monitoring reporting standards
- Fisheries Action Plans (FAPs) all rivers
- Audit FAPs allocate funds accordingly
19Common Features 3.Fisheries Action Plans
- Statutory requirement for All Rivers
- Cover all fish species their habitats
- Functions
- Assess status of all fish species habitats
- Define management actions
- Report on progress
- Audit on 6 year cycle
- Performance linked to future (public) funding
20Common Features 4.Role of Fisheries Trusts
- Not included in new structure but should be
maintained where there is need - Local involvement Independent Voice
- Charitable status Funding
- Role in Habitat Restoration
- Role in Education
- Contribute to management actions locally
21Common Features 5.Potential Funding Sources
- Private
- Fishery Assessment or Levy
- Permit /day ticket tax
- Service charge or Sporting Rate
- Public
- Grant in Aid (GIA from SEPA SNH)
- Individual
- Rod Licence (e.g. 24 trout coarse fish, 64
salmon) - Tagging System
22Proposed Structures
- 4 Possible Management Models Proposed
- Based on Co-management Continuum
- Different levels of Public/Private interaction
- Range from Public sector dominated to Private
sector dominated.
23Proposed Structures1. Regional Fisheries Agency
- New Public Body (centralised structure)
- DSFBs disbanded (new legislation)
- 10 Regional Fisheries Agencies operating under
guidance from NFFA - Funding primarily from public sector
- GIA
- Rod Licence
- Fisheries Assessment maintained in some form
- Advisory committees without executive power
24Model 1 Regional Fisheries Agency Public
(centralised) with Advisory Committee
SEERAD
FRS
SNH
SEPA
? 1
- DSFB Disbanded
- New Legislation
- Publicly Funded
- RFAs undertake Management Enforcement
Regional Fisheries Agency
Officers (executive decisions)
? 10
Advisory Committee (non executive)
25Model 1 Regional Fisheries Agency Public
(centralised) with Advisory Committee
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
26Proposed Structures 2. Regional Fisheries Boards
- DSFB Retained
- Remit extended to cover all species
- DSFB encouraged to merge (multi-catchment)
- 10 Regional Offices (Autonomous)
- Operating under guidance from NFFA (FAPs)
- Additional funding from public sector
- GIA
- Rod Licence
- Fisheries Assessment maintained
- Privately managed but publicly accountable
27Model 2 Regional Fisheries Boards Decentralised
with Executive Committee
SEERAD
FRS
SEPA
SNH
? 1
- DSFB Maintained
- Legislation Modified
- Wider Committee representation
Regional Fisheries Board
Executive Committee (locally elected with exec.
power)
? 10
? 1-6 ?
28Model 2 Regional Fisheries Boards Decentralised
Structure
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
29Proposed Structures 3. Regional Fisheries
Councils
- DSFBs retained but with modified powers
- Responsibilities for enforcement
- New equivalent public mirror body
- Responsibilities for management reporting
- 10 Regions each with local committee
- Wider representation than present
(public/private) - Executive Power
30Proposed Structures 3 (cont). Regional Fisheries
Councils
- 10 Regional Offices operate under guidance from
NFFA (FAPs) - Funding from public private sector
- GIA
- Rod Licence
- Fisheries Assessment maintained
- Management combines public private sector
involvement
31Model 3 Regional Fisheries Council decentralised
with Executive Committee
SEERAD
FRS
SEPA
SNH
? 1
- DSFB Maintained
- Legislation modified
- Wider Committee representation
- Public/Private partnership
Regional Fisheries Council
Executive Committee (locally elected with exec.
power)
? 10
Management
Enforcement
Officers (Public Sector)
? 1-6 ?
32Model 3 Regional Fisheries Council Decentralised
with Executive Committee
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
33Proposed Structures4. Regional Fisheries Service
- DSFBs Disbanded (New legislation)
- 10 Regions each with local committee
- Wider representation (public/private)
- Executive Power
- 10 Regions operate under guidance from NFFA
- Funding from public private sector
- GIA, Rod Licence,
- Fisheries Assessment maintained
- Management combines public
private sector involvement
34Model 4 Regional Fisheries Service Centralised
with Executive Committee
SEERAD
FRS
SEPA
SNH
? 1
Regional Fisheries Service
- DSB Disbanded
- New Legislation
- Wider Committee representation
Executive Committee (locally elected with
executive power)
? 10
Officers instructed by Exec. Comm.
35Model 2 Regional Fisheries Service Centralised
with Executive Committee
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
36Favoured Regional Structures
Instructive
Consultative
Cooperative
Advisory
Informative
37Recommended structure
Suggest two models for consideration
Model 3 Regional Fisheries Council Decentralised
with Executive Committee
Model 4 Regional Fisheries Service Centralised
with Executive Committee
38Positive Aspects Retained
?
?
?
?
?
39Negative Aspects Addressed
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
40Funding
- Anglers contribute 113M to Scotland
- Very little public sector support!
- Potential Public Sources
- Rod licence - 4.0 M (resident visitors)
- Grant in Aid - 3.5M matched funding
- 20M if given parity with SEPA SNH
- Potential Private Sources
- Fishery Assessment (Levy) - 3.5M
- Combining public, individual private s
- Total Annual Income 11M
41Staffing
- 11M Available
- Public sector average employment cost of 50K
p.a. (oncosts, overheads, offices etc) - 220 Staff in Total
- 20 Staff in NFFA (Hub)
- Administration, finance, fisheries specialists
- 20 Staff in each Regional Office
- Fisheries monitoring management, enforcement,
administration - Staffing to be locally determined by each Regions
needs
42Summarise
- Maintain private sector and voluntary sector
vigour enthusiasm - Executive decision making powers vital should
be retained - However, broader representation accountability
are essential - Local management (FAPs Funding)
43Where Next?
- Feedback
- Refine models
- Further investigate finance
- GIA, rod licence, tagging schemes
- Make recommendations to the Minister