Halibut Wars: New Rules Redistribute Fishy Fortunes
Published Date: 4/2/2025
Rule
Summary
Starting in 2025, Pacific halibut fishing rules are changing for anglers in Washington, Oregon, and California. The new plan shares fish better between areas and lets managers move unused fishing chances from Northern California to South of Point Arena. These updates help protect halibut while giving fishermen more chances to catch them during the season.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
Catch Sharing Plan Approved for Area 2A
Starting in 2025, the rule approves changes to the Pacific Halibut Catch Sharing Plan (CSP) for IPHC Area 2A off Washington, Oregon, and California. The changes aim to share halibut between areas to conserve the species while giving anglers more chances to fish during the season.
2025 Recreational Season Dates and Allocations
The rule implements new management measures for the 2025 recreational fisheries in Area 2A, including changes to recreational fishery season open dates and subarea allocations. If you fish recreationally in Area 2A waters off Washington, Oregon, or California, these season dates and how many fish are allocated to subareas will be different for 2025.
Inseason Transfer Between California Subareas
The rule adds an inseason management provision that allows managers to transfer anticipated uncaught recreational allocation from the Northern California subarea to the South of Point Arena subarea. This change can move unused fishing chance inseason to South of Point Arena to help achieve the Area 2A allocation.
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