HCONRES-85-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Jared Huffman (D-CA)
What it does
This concurrent resolution would formally recognize the 50th anniversary of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA), originally passed in 1976. It would express Congress's recognition of the law's role in managing U.S. marine fisheries, commend fishermen, scientists, tribal members, and resource managers who work under the MSA, and reaffirm Congress's commitment to science-based fishery management. As a concurrent resolution, it would carry no binding legal force and would not change any existing law or appropriate any funds.
Who benefits
Commercial fishing industry stakeholders and fishing communities whose work is publicly recognized. Indigenous and Tribal communities whose historical stewardship role is formally acknowledged. Federal and state fishery managers, scientists, and conservationists who receive congressional commendation. Coastal economies broadly, through reaffirmation of congressional support for the MSA framework.
Who is hurt
No group is directly harmed by this resolution, as it carries no binding legal effect, changes no law, and appropriates no funds. Indirectly, those who oppose the MSA's current regulatory framework — such as fishing operators who view its catch limits as overly restrictive — may object to Congress reaffirming the law without addressing their concerns.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the MSA represents one of the most successful federal conservation and economic management frameworks in U.S. history, having helped rebuild 52 fish stocks and reduce overfishing to just 4 percent of managed stocks by 2025. They contend that formal congressional recognition honors the fishermen, scientists, and tribal stewards whose work sustains a $319 billion industry supporting 2.1 million jobs, and that reaffirming commitment to the MSA sends a clear signal of stability to coastal communities that depend on predictable fishery management.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a commemorative resolution that reaffirms the MSA's framework without addressing its documented shortcomings — such as persistent overfishing in certain regions, economic hardship from catch limit reductions, and inadequate disaster relief mechanisms — amounts to a missed opportunity for meaningful legislative action. They contend that celebrating the status quo while fishing communities face ongoing challenges from changing ocean conditions and foreign illegal fishing may paper over the need for substantive reauthorization and modernization of the law.