S-3579-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Dan Sullivan (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would reconstitute an existing federal task force as the "Bycatch Reduction and Research Task Force," directing NOAA to conduct salmon life history research, ecosystem analyses, and genetic sampling in the Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands, and Gulf of Alaska. It would authorize $4 million per year from 2027–2031 for an existing bycatch reduction engineering program and establish a donation-funded assistance fund administered by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to help commercial fishermen purchase or modify gear to reduce bycatch and seafloor habitat disturbance. It would also require NOAA to streamline electronic monitoring and reporting systems and publish transparent observer coverage data online.
Who benefits
Commercial fishermen and vessel operators in Alaska who would receive financial assistance for gear upgrades. Small-scale fishing fleets that would benefit from streamlined electronic monitoring permitting. Alaska Native communities and subsistence users whose culturally important fish species would receive focused research attention. Researchers, universities, and nonprofit organizations eligible for competitive grants. The broader U.S. seafood industry, which depends on sustainable Alaska fisheries. Marine ecosystems and the species within them that would benefit from reduced bycatch and less seafloor disturbance. Consumers who benefit from long-term fishery sustainability.
Who is hurt
Fishing operations that rely heavily on non-pelagic trawl gear may face indirect pressure if research findings lead to future regulatory changes. Competing fishing sectors or regions not covered by the bill's geographic focus may receive comparatively less federal research attention and funding. Taxpayers would bear the cost of the $4 million annual authorization for the engineering program. Foreign hatchery operators are specifically flagged for scrutiny in the ecosystem analysis, which could affect diplomatic or trade relationships. Observers and traditional monitoring contractors could face reduced demand if electronic monitoring expands to replace human observers.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Alaska fisheries — among the most productive in the world — face mounting pressure from climate-driven ecosystem shifts, and that data gaps in salmon bycatch and benthic habitat impact are hampering effective management. They contend the bill takes a science-first, voluntary approach: the assistance fund relies on private donations rather than mandatory fees, gear upgrades are incentivized rather than mandated, and the task force includes commercial fishermen, Alaska Natives, and academic experts to ensure research reflects on-the-water realities. They point to the existing Bycatch Reduction Engineering Program's track record as evidence that targeted gear research produces measurable reductions in incidental catch.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's core assistance fund is funded entirely by voluntary donations, making its real-world impact uncertain and potentially negligible if private contributions fall short. They contend that the $4 million annual authorization for the engineering program is modest relative to the scale of Alaska's commercial fishing industry and may produce research without the regulatory teeth needed to drive meaningful bycatch reductions. Critics may also argue that exempting the task force from the Federal Advisory Committee Act reduces transparency and public accountability in a body that will shape federal research priorities affecting billions of dollars in commercial fishing activity.