Coastal Conservation Association Facts

A Few Facts about Coastal Conservation Association

CCA has more than 206 chapters of organized anglers throughout 17 coastal states with a current combined membership of close to 100,000.

CCA’s state and national staff members coordinate more than 400 chapter events and fundraisers each year.

CCA has more than 80 state and national committees, 150 national board directors, more than 900 board members – on local, state, and national levels – and tens of thousands of active volunteers contributing to the organizations daily development and growth.

CCA is recognized by fisheries managers as instrumental in the recovery of redfish, king mackerel, Spanish mackerel, speckled trout, striped bass, Gulf grouper, and Atlantic weakfish.

CCA helped establish game fish status for billfish and redfish, net bans in four states, and the prohibition of many destructive gear types. We have been instrumental in establishing far-reaching conservation legislation on both the state and federal levels.

CCA has a legal defensefund that has been used to defend net bans and bycatch reduction devices, support pro-fisheries legislation, and enforce existing regulations.

CCA has ledthe battle to protect recreational anglers’ freedom to fish. When it is adopted into law, the Freedom to Fish Act will provide reasonable guidelines for the use of Marine Protected Areas by fishery managers and restricts the use of no-fishing zones for recreational fishermen to instances where all other fishery management tools have failed to fix the problem.

CCA has a registered lobbyist in Washington D.C. and has been active in critical fisheries debates since 1984. We currently retain as many as 17 professional state and federal professional lobbyists.

CCA members include a former U.S. President, former Cabinet members, Congressmen, Senators, ICCAT Commissioners, Fishery Management Council members, Governors, State Legislators, and state and federal fisheries managers.

CCA makes decisions from the bottom up, involving our membership in all regional and national policy positions. We operate as a three-tiered organization – local, state and national.

CCA has an award-winning national publication, TIDE magazine, a special youth publication, Rising Tide and numerous state newsletters.

CCA has an annual audit and tax return prepared by a nationally recognized public accounting firm.

CCA has a proven methodology for tracking membership and a nationally recognized retention rate.

Your CCA North Carolina Has…

  • Supported the designation of Cape Lookout Jetty, Masonboro Jetty, and Carolina Beach Turning Basin as net free areas (1994)
  • Won Federal District Court approval on flynet ban in North Carolina (1995)
  • Urged state Marine Fisheries Commission to ban flynets in the Atlantic Ocean south of Cape Hatteras to protect gray trout, other species (1995)
  • Pressed for three-year ban on sale of new commercial fishing licenses which led to the Fisheries Reform Act (1995)
  • Helped win passage of Fisheries Reform Act, the first comprehensive state fishery reform (1997)
  • Was the primary proponent of a recreational saltwater license to provide an accurate count of recreational anglers in the state and provide funding to fishery management programs and enforcement (1997-2004)
  • Requested the North Carolina Marine Fisheries Commission to cease harvest of river herring and conserve local striped bass stocks (2003)
  • Helped establish the first-ever hatchery for Southern flounder and continue to help finance that operation (2005) (2008)
  • Supported closing of Primary nursery areas in the Neuse, Pamlico and Pungo rivers to shrimp trawls to prevent Southern flounder bycatch (2006)
  • Supported stringent new regulations to help recover depleted striped bass populations in the central coastal area (Pamlico and Neuse Rivers) and in the southern coastal area (Cape Fear River) (2007)
  • Integrally involved in the Oyster Shell Recycling Program to improve water quality (2007)
  • Supported the implementation of a moratorium on river herring to allow near-collapsed stocks to recover (2007)
  • Raised over $13,000 to help refurbish Artificial Reef 291 (Bayview Reef) in the Pamlico River.
  • Supported implementation of coastal stormwater runoff rules that will keep shellfish waters pristine, reduce aquifer depletion and prevent saltwater intrusion (2007-2008)
  • Supplied the North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries Patrol with 10 pair of night vision binoculars. (2008)
  • Supported legislation to approve the State of North Carolina taking control the Locks and Dams on the Cape Fear River allowing striped bass, shad and herring to swim upstream due to newly built “rock arch fish ramps” (2008)
  • Supported ORV public access to beach recreational activities on Cape Hatteras Seashore (2008-2009)
  • Assured the continued recovery of red drum by supporting the current conservation measures for both commercial and recreational fishermen. Championed the use of circle hooks in the Pamlico Sound to protect the large red drum fishery (2009)
  • Assured the continued recovery of red drum by supporting the current conservation measures for both commercial and recreational fishermen. Championed regulations that require the use of circle hooks during certain months and times in the Pamlico Sound to protect the large red drum fishery (2009)
  • Supported the implementation of Section 10 permit protecting the sea turtles and requiring commercial nets out of the water during specific times and will make comments to assure the settlement is adhered to (2010)
  • CCA NC was the primary proponent of House Bill 1713 that requires all FMP’s to have greater than a 50% probability of ending overfishing within two years and restoring the stock to sustainable harvest within 10 years. (2010)
  • Supported and financed two $ 1,000 scholarships to North Carolina Graduate students to conduct further research to benefit our marine resources.( 2010)
  • Championed efforts to restore southern flounder stocks and spotted seatrout through harvest reductions, size and bag limits, and seasonal closures. Continue to assure these plans adhere to the new bill 2010-13 to achieve success. (2010)
  • Donated $ 20,000 to help refurbish Artificial Reef 392 in the Neuse River below New Bern. This reef was completed in 2011
  • Supported HB 353-Designation of Coastal Game Fish. An act to designate red drum, spotted sea trout, and striped bass as coastal game fish; to prohibit the taking of these fish other than hook-and-line, and to prohibit the sale of coastal game fish. (2011)

CCA is working hard EVERYDAY to achieve much more!