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Item S1BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY Meeting Date November 20, 2013 Division: BOCC Bulk Item: Yes x No _ Department: George R. Neugent Staff Contact Person/Phone #: T. Colonna 4512 AGENDA ITEM WORDING: Approval of a resolution of the Board of Commissioners of Monroe County, Florida Supporting the creation of the Bonefish and Tarpon Conservation Research and Outreach Center to be located at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Keys Marine Laboratory in the City of Layton, Florida. ITEM BACKGROUND: PREVIOUS RELEVANT BOCC ACTION: CONTRACT /AGREEMENT CHANGES: STAFF RECOMMENDATIONS: TOTAL COST: INDIRECT COST: BUDGETED: Yes No DIFFERENTIAL OF LOCAL PREFERENCE: COST TO COUNTY: SOURCE OF FUNDS: REVENUE PRODUCING: Yes No AMOUNT PER MONTH Year APPROVED BY: County Atty OMB/Purchasing Risk Management DOCUMENTATION: Included x Not Required DISPOSITION: AGENDA ITEM # Revised 7/09 Commissioner George Neugent RESOLUTION NO. - 2013 A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA SUPPORTING THE CREATION OF THE BONEFISH AND TARPON CONSERVATION RESEARCH AND OUTREACH CENTER TO BE LOCATED AT THE FLORIDA FISH AND WILDLIFE CONSERVATION COMMISSION'S KEYS MARINE LABORATORY IN THE CITY OF LAYTON, FLORIDA. WHEREAS, the importance of recreational fishing to the State of Florida, particularly the Florida Keys, is underscored by the legislative promotion of Florida as the "Fishing Capital of the World'; and WHEREAS, Florida's recreational and commercial fishing industries and associated businesses, worth billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs to the State's economy, have been severely impacted by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill; and WHEREAS, extensive media coverage of the spill negatively impacted tourism - related fisheries businesses throughout the state; combined, these impacts resulted in significant loss of human uses and access to Florida's saltwater fisheries resources; and WHEREAS, sport fishing in Florida accounts for more than $5 billion dollars of economic impact to the State, rivaling the citrus industry in economic productivity, supporting one of the largest saltwater fishing- related tourism industries in the world; and WHEREAS, close to half of the estimated recreational fishing trips in Florida are made by visitors to the State, driving a tremendous economic engine, including $119.7 million in indirect business taxes; and WHEREAS, there is increased recognition that precious marine ecosystems like the Florida Keys and the Gulf of Mexico, and the world -class fisheries they support, are not inexhaustible resources; and WHEREAS, developing methods and strategies to sustain these lucrative and ecologically important fisheries are critical for the economic and cultural stability of Florida in coming decades; and WHEREAS, bonefish and tarpon sport fisheries, perhaps some of the world's most storied fisheries, provide livelihoods to tens of thousands of Americans from Texas to Florida to Virginia; and WHEREAS, tarpon fisheries alone add billions of dollars of economic impact annually to the Gulf of Mexico and southeastern U.S. economies; about 70% of all the current IGFA world records (fly and saltwater line class) for bonefish and tarpon have been caught in the Florida Keys, making it a world -class destination; and Page 1 of 3 Res Bonefish & Tarpon Conservation Center (Neugent) BOCC 11/20/13 (KP) Commissioner George Neugent WHEREAS, South Florida is the birthplace of "flats fishing," (which includes bonefish, tarpon, and permit) a unique set of "local" fisheries with an annual economic impact exceeding $465 million; and WHEREAS, tarpon are also a vital seasonal component of the Florida Keys fishery during their annual migration and also support important recreational fisheries throughout Florida, the Gulf of Mexico, southeastern United States, and the Caribbean Sea; and WHEREAS, bonefish and tarpon are also important components of the recreational fishery in the Florida Everglades, with an estimated annual economic impact of about $1 billion dollars; and WHEREAS„ the importance of the South Florida coastal marine ecosystem to broader Florida and surrounding region's fisheries is underscored by research that clearly shows that most adult tarpon, seen seasonally (spring, summer) in the Florida Keys and the more northerly Florida coastlines, migrate to the plume of the Mississippi River in the northern Gulf of Mexico, while others migrate northward along the southeastern U.S. coast to as far north as the Chesapeake Bay; and WHEREAS, due to observed declines in catches and apparent abundance from known historical levels, there are serious concerns today about the status and sustainability of bonefish and tarpon populations in Florida and the Gulf of Mexico and southeast U.S. region, and thus, the economic, ecological, and culturally important fisheries they support; and WHEREAS, both species spawn well offshore, so their larvae are vulnerable to the vagaries of ocean currents and waterborne contaminants. Recent research indicates that tarpon likely spawn in the area proximal to the DWH oil spill. Satellite- tagged and tracked adult tarpon traveled to the offshore DWH spill area during the full moons of summer, the exact period when tarpon spawn; and WHEREAS, additional research is needed to better understand the extent that the DWH spill, and other perturbations in the future, impact these population migrations and spawning successes; and WHEREAS, recent larval sampling and satellite - tagging research has identified several major spawning locations for tarpon — both in areas that were impacted by the DWH spill; and WHEREAS, another suspected site is on the outer edge of the western shelf of the Florida peninsula and another in the Florida Keys where larvae produced in the DWH area were impacted by the spill. Larvae produced at the western shelf edge and in the Florida Keys would have been subject to DWH petroleum exposure if the Loop current had picked up the petroleum, as many researchers anticipated. Such impacts can have profound regional and population level effects; and Page 2 of 3 Res Bonefish & Tarpon Conservation Center (Neugent) BOCC 11/20/13 (KP) Commissioner George Neugent WHEREAS, bonefish and tarpon are critical and economically important species to the Gulf of Mexico and particularly to Monroe County; NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMIVIISSIONERS OF MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA: 1. The Board fully supports the creation of the Bonefish and Tarpon Conservation Research and Outreach Center to be located at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Keys Marine Laboratory in the City of Layton. 2. The Board recommends immediate action be taken to fund this critical effort that will benefit the entire Gulf of Mexico and the economies of impacted states and counties. PASSED AND ADOPTED by the Board of County Commissioners, Monroe County, Florida at a regular meeting of said Board held on the 20` of November, 2013. Mayor Mayor Pro Tem Commissioner Commissioner Commissioner (Seal) ATTEST: AMY HEAVILIN, CLERK BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA By Deputy Clerk By: Mayor /Chairman .OUWy ATTORNEY M TO FORM' JP- Res Bonefish & Tarpon Conservation Center (Neugent) BOCC 11/10/13 (KP) Page 3 of 3