After two years, consensus on oyster policy still elusive in Maryland.
Its hard to come together over oysters in Maryland. Two years ago, seeking to get past seemingly endless conflicts between environmentalists and watermen, Maryland lawmakers ordered fisheries managers to try a more consensus-based approach to managing the states oyster population.
In a bill passed over Gov. Larry Hogans veto, the General Assembly directed the state Department of Natural Resources to work with scientists and help the DNRs oyster advisory commission come up with ideas for rebuilding the oyster population while maintaining a sustainable harvest. Any recommendation would have to be supported by 75% of the panels members.
After meeting more than two dozen times, the DNR panel reported Dec. 1 that it had agreed on 19 recommendations only one of which called for doing anything different about oyster management. That one urged the state to invest $2 million a year over the next 25 years to restore oysters in Eastern Bay, once a source of bountiful harvests, but which hasnt been productive for the last two decades. The other recommendations called mostly for more shell or substrate to restore or replenish reefs, plus more research, data collection and evaluation of existing management practices.
I think everybody was hoping for a little more consensus, said Anne Arundel County Sen. Sarah Elfreth, a chief sponsor of the oyster management law and a member of the DNR advisory panel.'>>>
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