Nation’s First Regional Ocean Planning Body Meets & National Ocean Policy Workshop

The Northeast Regional Planning Body at the Big Table (Photo credit: Robin Just)

Last month regional ocean planning got underway in the Northeast United States. The Northeast Regional Planning Body met for the first time in Portland, Maine, on Nov. 19-20. “I’ve often heard the phrase ‘everyone has a seat at the table,’ but this is the first time I’ve seen it,” said National Marine Fisheries Service Regional Administrator John Bullard. His keynote statement pretty well summed up the sense of opportunity voiced by everyone attending the meeting.

We are pleased to report that there was clear agreement at the meeting that they will create an open and transparent process, ensure stakeholders are involved and the critical role of science and data in decision making – all key elements of successful ocean planning as you will recall from Ocean Frontiers.

As established by the (US) National Ocean Policy, the regional planning body (RPB) consists of representatives from federal and state agencies, regional tribes, the New England Fishery Management Council, and an ex officio member from Canada. The RPB was brought together to design the process for the first regional ocean plan to be developed in the United States.

“This is the first time that all of these representatives from various levels of the government have gotten together to begin this work,” said John Weber, the ocean planning director for the Northeast Regional Ocean Council. The fact that this collaboration is taking place, which allows for transparency as all sides are present, is looking promising for the future of our oceans and the economies that rely on them. As reported by E&E News, the regional planning body will strive to create ocean plans that reach across state and federal boundaries in an effort to reduce conflicts among fishing, offshore energy, shipping, conservation and recreation, as more users make demands on the sea.

“What it means for us is greater predictability, lower risk, lower cost. In our view, when you can identify the right places to do ocean energy, you can do everything better — you can do conservation better and can do energy development better,” said Markian Melnyk, president of Atlantic Grid Development, a group working on a proposal for a 300-mile offshore transmission network in the mid-Atlantic.

“It doesn’t have to be a fight over siting; this type of collaborative siting work helps makes it more about science and more about sound economics than about fighting,” he added.

Effective ocean planning portal tools have been launched online at by Northeast and mid-Atlantic groups. The portal is a place for compiled data and interactive maps, which allows all different types of ocean users to view ocean features such as fishing grounds, critical habitat, shipping corridors and even wind speeds. View one of the portals here.

“It is a lot easier to look at a variety of maps than to try to look through [environmental impact statement] reports,” said Tony MacDonald, Urban Coast Institute at Monmouth University director, who has helped lead these effort. “You can see areas where conflicts might be and compatibilities might be. At the end of this discussion, it should put everybody on the same base line and hopefully screen out conflicts earlier in the process.”

As this was the RPB’s first meeting, there is much work to be done, however this first step is huge and worth congratulating. To learn more about the RPB and its inaugural meeting check out Open Channels blog post here.

LEARN MORE, TAKE ACTION: National Ocean Policy Briefing 

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Pacific City, OR — A proposed wave energy site in Oregon (Photo credit: Nastassja Pace) 

On Thursday, December 13th, 6-9pm, at the Leftbank Annex (101 North Weidler St., Portland, OR) you are invited to a free briefing on the National Ocean Policy and ocean conservation efforts in Oregon—a great way to learn how to take action in support of our oceans and coasts!

Guests attending will include the Oregon Governor’s office and Congressional staff. Presentations from Surfrider, Our Ocean, American Littoral Society will be given as well as a screening of excerpts from  Ocean Frontiers. Sandwiches and refreshments will be provided. Please RSVP here.

Thanks for all you do!

Karen Meyer
Executive Director, Green Fire Productions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Educator’s Guides Now Available & CA Premieres

 

Last week had many people heading back to school, both students and teachers alike, and we hope you’ll find this update quite timely. We are excited to announce that Discussion/Study Guides for the Ocean Frontiers film are now available for educators at the middle/high school and university levels.

The university-level Discussion Guide was developed by the National Sea Grant Law Center with the assistance of Vermont Law School Environmental Law Society. This Discussion Guide was developed to help professors incorporate Ocean Frontiers into the classroom.  The Sea Grant Law Center describes Ocean Frontiers as “an ideal communication tool to help audiences understand key principles of ecosystem-based management and coastal and marine spatial planning. These complex topics come to life and are easy to grasp through the stories and people featured in Ocean Frontiers.”

The Educator’s Resource Guide for middle/high school teachers was produced by the  Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences and Colorado Ocean Coalition member Emily Kellagher. This Educator’s Guide is designed to help teachers blend the four stories within Ocean Frontiers into their curriculum and expose students to positive examples of conservation and complementary science concepts.

To download the Guides, simply visit: www.ocean-frontiers.org/discussion-guides. Need an Ocean Frontiers DVD to accompany your Discussion Guide? Please fill out the Host A Screening form, and we’ll send you one for free along with other helpful materials. Please share the news with ocean educators.

 Special Upcoming Premieres in California:

Bay Area Film Premiere – Thursday, September 13, 2012
In San Francisco at the Aquarium of the Bay, in partnership with the San Francisco International Ocean Film Festival. Includes reception and post-film Q & A. For more info: http://www.oceanfilmfest.org/

Monterey Community Premiere – Sunday, September 23, 2012
More than 20 organizations representing the region’s agriculture, recreation, conservation, business, education, and community are co-hosting this special event. Elected leaders will welcome the audience. The film and post-film Q & A will be followed by a reception featuring sustainable seafood and wine from the Central Coast. For more info: https://ocean-frontiers.org/monterey/

Cheers,
Karen Anspacher-Meyer and the Ocean Frontiers Team

Who’s Embarking on a New Era in Ocean Stewardship?

Fishermen, scientists, business owners, farmers & more are charting a new course for the ocean—one of collaboration & holistic approaches, as seen in Ocean Frontiers. Now, we are able to offer you a more in depth look at what these ocean champions are doing—learn more about their work, watch new video clips and see how to get involved!  Each story now has its own webpage.

Click on the titles below to go to that specific story’s page—with more videos, articles and links! 

whales and ships

Saving Whales at Stellwagen Bank

Learn more about collaborating to save whales and ocean economies. Meet the project partners, and check out the cool work on endangered right whales.

 

An Ocean Blueprint for Florida Keys

See how ocean planning is being done right by a diverse group of ocean stakeholders. Hear from Keys fishermen about how ocean planning benefits their businesses.

 

Iowa Farmers & Gulf of Mexico

Connect with people across the Mississippi River Basin who are both changing their agricultural practices and implementing innovative conservation measures.

 

Port Orford Fishermen Protect Ocean & Way of Life

Learn from these visionary fishermen and their partners about how to create and promote a community stewardship area for a healthy near shore ecosystem that will support their town’s economy.

Kudos to Oregon First Lady Cylvia Hayes and Leesa Cobb of the Port Orford Ocean Resource Team for the this excellent op-ed they wrote on the National Ocean Policy and its value to Oregon’s coastal communities

Thanks for all you do!
The Ocean Frontiers Team

10th Annual Wild & Scenic Film Festival: January 13-15, 2012


We are delighted to announce that Ocean Frontiers is an official selection of this coming year’s Wild & Scenic Film Festival.

Considered the largest film festival of its kind, the Wild & Scenic illuminates award-winning filmmakers and their stories alike, from around the world, to instigate positive social and ecological change. As Ocean Frontiers aims to do just that, and specifically around coastal and marine issues, it’s only natural we are proud to make the pick.

Join us for the 10th Annual Wild & Scenic Film Festival, this January 13-15th in Nevada City, California—get inspired and influence change.

Ocean Frontiers’ 48-minute version will be shown at the Masons’ venue on both Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning highlighting two of the four chapters. The two segments include the Gulf of Mexico and Iowa – where Farmers, by better tending their soils, are helping to restore the Gulf of Mexico more than a thousand miles away, and Port Orford, Oregon – a visionary fishing community that is working to achieve both a healthy near shore marine ecosystem and a sustainable fishery that supports their town.

Films we are excited to be accompanied by this January, at the festival, include Chasing Water, Patagonia Rising, One Ocean and many more about community activism, adventure, energy and climate change, agriculture, Native American and indigenous cultures.

To learn more about the Wild & Scenic Film Festival and to purchase tickets, click here.

 

 

 

 

Sneak Preview in Astoria, Oregon Following TSPWG Meeting


Did you know Oregon is a leader in wave energy? And that there are three marine reserve sites pending implementation along Oregon’s coast? What does this mean to Oregonians and our beautiful, rich coastline—to our ocean viewers and surfers, our fisherman and businesses, our tribes and our state agencies?

On December 15th and 16th, 2011, you can join Oregon Ocean Policy Advisory (OPAC) and the Territorial Sea Working Group (TSPWG)—representing a range of Oregon ocean stakeholders—for the unveiling of Oregon’s territorial sea preliminary draft maps, as well as the partake in public comments, discuss planning options for our energy future, and hear the latest on the marine reserve process.

An Ocean Frontiers film sneak preview will follow the Territorial Sea Plan Working Group Meeting on Thursday December 15th, 2011, at 6PM; located at the Fort George Brewery (Lovell Taproom), Astoria, Oregon—hosted by Clatsop County.

Ocean Frontiers: The Dawn of a New Age in Ocean Stewardship is Green Fire Productions latest film and outreach campaign—intended to inspire, engage and mobilize communities around the nation to better care for the ocean both, locally and regionally, and to show support for the National Ocean Policy.

Coinciding with the sneak premiere of Ocean Frontiers, Oregon Coastal Zone Management Association (OCZMA) will premiere their film: Oregon’s Ocean Fisheries: A Conservation Story.

To learn about Oregon’s TSPWG and OPAC, and to make your voice heard in this important process, go to www.oregon.gov/LCD/OPAC/.

To read more on wave energy and how Oregon is playing a vital role in shaping the future of it, go to www.oregonwave.org/.