HR-207-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Robert Wittman (R-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Commerce to establish a task force focused on shark depredation — the partial or complete removal of a hooked fish from a fishing line by a shark before the line is retrieved. The task force would be responsible for improving coordination among fisheries managers and shark researchers, identifying research priorities and funding opportunities, developing management strategies, and producing educational materials. It would be required to report its findings to Congress within two years of enactment and every two years thereafter, and would automatically sunset seven years after its establishment.
Who benefits
Commercial and recreational fishers who lose catch to shark depredation, particularly those operating in coastal and offshore waters. Coastal fishing communities and charter fishing businesses that suffer economic losses from depredation events. Marine researchers and shark scientists who would gain a coordinated funding and priority-setting framework. Regional Fishery Management Councils and Marine Fisheries Commissions that would gain a formal coordination mechanism. Coastal state fish and wildlife agencies seeking federal partnership. Indirectly, anglers and seafood consumers who may benefit from improved fishery yields.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would bear the administrative costs of establishing and operating the task force, though those costs are likely modest given the advisory nature of the body. No group faces direct regulatory burden under this bill. Organizations or researchers currently working on shark depredation independently may face competition for limited federal funding if priorities are redirected. Shark conservation advocates may be concerned that management strategies developed by the task force could eventually lead to policies that affect shark populations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that shark depredation is a growing and underaddressed problem that imposes real economic losses on commercial and recreational fishers, particularly as some shark populations have recovered under existing protections. They contend that no coordinated federal mechanism currently exists to align research, management, and education efforts across the many agencies and councils involved, and that a structured task force with a mandatory reporting requirement and a built-in sunset is a targeted, low-cost way to fill that gap without imposing new regulations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a new federal bureaucratic body to study a problem that existing agencies — including the National Marine Fisheries Service and Regional Fishery Management Councils — already have the authority and expertise to address, making the task force duplicative and an inefficient use of federal resources. They contend that without any accompanying funding authorization or regulatory mandate, the task force's reports may produce little actionable change, and that the same goals could be achieved through existing interagency coordination mechanisms at lower cost.