Scott, Donalds' FISHES Act Passes Congress, Heads to Biden's Desk

Scott, Donalds' FISHES Act Passes Congress, Heads to Biden's Desk

Jackson Bakich
Jackson Bakich
|
December 23, 2024

Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) and Representative Byron Donalds' (R-FL) Fishery Improvement to Streamline Untimely Regulatory Hurdles post Emergency Situation (FISHES) Act has passed Congress in a bipartisan fashion and intends to "improve the federal regulatory process associated with the allocation of fishery disaster relief and expedite the distribution of federal relief following official fishery disaster declarations—which the State of Florida has requested seven times since 2012."

Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Marco Rubio (R-FL), and Dan Sullivan (R-AK) helped Sen. Scott in this effort in the upper chamber.

In the lower chamber, the FISHES Act passed in the House earlier this year. Rep. Donalds led the way and Representative Mary Peltola (D-AK) co-led the bill in the House.

The lower chamber also had bipartisan cosponsors, including Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), Neal Dunn (R-FL), Troy Carter (D-LA), Troy Nehls (R-TX), James Moylan (R-Guam), John Rutherford (R-FL), Daniel Webster (R-FL), Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), Aumua Amata Coleman Radewagen (R-America Samoa), Clay Higgins (R-LA.), and Brian Mast (R-FL).

Sen. Scott mentioned that the FISHES Act would aid small businesses, including Florida fisheries, and keep them from wondering how and when the U.S. government will respond following a disaster.

“Floridians know better than anyone that when disaster strikes, families and small businesses can’t be left wondering whether the federal government is going to show up," said Sen. Scott. "I’m proud that the FISHES Act has passed the Senate and finally heads to the president’s desk so we can ensure our fishing industry in Florida and across the country has a reliable partner in Washington.”

Furthermore, Rep. Donalds stated that "bureaucratic inaction" has left fisheries in limbo following the hurricanes dating back a few years.

“For years, fishery disaster determinations across our nation have been left pending due to bureaucratic inaction. This includes the catastrophic devastation caused by Hurricane Ian in our Southwest Florida community," said Rep. Donalds. "This is a national problem; this is wrong; this must change; and this is why I introduced 'The FISHES Act’ alongside Senator Rick Scott to expedite fishery disaster relief to communities in need. Thank you to my colleagues in the United States Senate for advancing this critical legislation to the President’s desk. Government must put the American people first and I am proud to stand-up for coastal communities across our nation.”

Per Sen. Scott's press release, the bill intends to "improve the federal regulatory processes associated with fishery disaster relief funding within the National Oceanic and  Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)" and "[cut] red tape by enacting a 90-day decision requirement for NOAA, in coordination with OMB, to deny/approve the State’s spending plan, which will ultimately expedite the federal fishery disaster relief funding process overall."

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Jackson Bakich

Jackson Bakich

Born in Orlando but raised in Lake County, Florida, Jackson Bakich is currently a senior at Florida State University. Growing up in the sunshine state, Bakich co-hosted the political talk radio show "Lake County Roundtable" (WLBE) and was a frequent guest for "Lake County Sports Show" (WQBQ). Currently, he is the Sports Editor of the FSView and the co-host of "Tomahawk Talk" (WVFS), a sports talk radio program covering Florida State athletics in Tallahassee.

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