The House - Los Angeles Times
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The House

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Fishery Program

A bill to extend a Great Society-vintage commercial and sport fishery program that President Reagan wants to terminate has been passed by the House and sent to the Senate on a vote of 268 for and 133 against.

The measure (HR 1025) extends the Anadromous Fish Conservation Act for three years, through fiscal 1988, at a cost of $7.5 million annually. Anadromous fish, Rep. Walter Jones (D-N.C.) said, “are fish that migrate from the ocean to fresh water to spawn,†such as salmon, striped bass and shad.

Enacted in 1965, the law pays at least half the cost of a variety of federal-state programs aimed chiefly at increasing the stocks of spawning fish.

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Supporter Norman Lent (R-N.Y.) said that in opposing the program the Administration “disregards the many benefits that anadromous fishery resources provide to the nation through the activities of the country’s sport and commercial fishermen.â€

Opponent Robert Walker (R-Pa.) said: “We keep overspending and overspending and overspending (and) it all adds up to the spending that goes into the deficit that we are now faced with.â€

How They Voted Yea Nay No vote Rep. Beilenson (D) x Rep. Berman (D) x Rep. Fiedler (R) x Rep. Moorhead (R) x Rep. Waxman (D) x

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Fish Research

By a vote of 252 for and 149 against, the House failed to achieve the two-thirds majority needed to pass a bill (HR 1028) to fund research at the nation’s several dozen fisheries.

Sponsors said they will take the bill back to the floor under normal parliamentary procedures, which require only a simple majority for passage. The bill seeks to repeal the Commercial Fisheries Research and Development Act, which the Administration has criticized as unwarranted federal intrusion--and spending--in areas that are the responsibility of private enterprise and state governments.

In effect, it would repeal all of that law except for research functions and a few other provisions. It proposes spending $5 million annually on research and $2.5 million in emergency aid to commercial fisheries hit by natural disasters.

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Supporter Don Young (R-Alaska) said: “We should cut the budget, but this is an area that needs to be financed.â€

Opponent Robert Walker (R-Pa.) said: “This is how we add onto those deficits.â€

Members voting yes wanted to enact a new research and disaster aid program for fisheries.

How They Voted Yea Nay No vote Rep. Beilenson (D) x Rep. Berman (D) x Rep. Fiedler (R) x Rep. Moorhead (R) x Rep. Waxman (D) x

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