
NOAA Cuts Could Impact Alaska Fisheries’ Research
It’s unknown how much the Trump administration’s quest to cut federal programs will affect those agencies. Among the slashing was to parts of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, including Alaska’s fisheries division, which could play a crucial role as the state faces plenty of challenges. Here’s the Alaska Beacon with more:
Since January, the Alaska regional office of NOAA Fisheries, also called the National Marine Fisheries Service, has lost 28 employees, about a quarter of its workforce, said Jon Kurland, the agency’s Alaska director.
“This, of course, reduces our capacity in a pretty dramatic fashion, including core fishery management functions such as regulatory analysis and development, fishery permitting and quota management, information technology, and operations to support sustainable fisheries,” Kurland told the North Pacific Fishery Management Council on Thursday.
NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which has labs in Juneau’s Auke Bay and Kodiak, among other sites, has lost 51 employees since January, affecting 6% to 30% of its operations, said director Robert Foy, the center’s director. That was on top of some job losses and other “resource limitations” prior to January, Foy said.
“It certainly puts us in a situation where it is clear that we must cancel some of our work,” he told the council.