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Winter crab dredge harvesting is nixed for 2024-2025 season

The Ann French glides through calm, mirror-like, morning waters near Middlesex County in the winter crab dredge fishery in 2007. She will not be working this winter as VMRC banned the fishery. (Photo by Larry Chowning)

Virginia’s winter crab dredge fishery is banned for the 2024-2025 season.

After a public hearing on Monday, Oct. 28, the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) voted, 6-1, to close the winter dredge season for blue crabs for the 2024-2025 season.

Virginia’s winter crab dredge fishery, that harvests between 80% to 90% female crabs that spawn in the spring, is one of the most controversial fisheries on the bay and that all came to light this year.

A male blue crab rests on the deck of a Virginia Institute of Marine Science research vessel during an annual blue crab winter dredge survey. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program, courtesy of Bay Journal News Service)

It all started when Virginia Watermen’s Association president and Virginia Crab Management Advisory Committee (CMAC) member James “J.C.” Hudgins recommended the CMAC request to VMRC staff to come up with guidelines for an experimental crab dredge fishery with a limit of “eight to 10 boats.” The CMAC board voted 10-4 in June in favor of sending the matter to VMRC for consideration.

Hudgins says he introduced the reopening proposal to provide more winter jobs for watermen who are pretty much confined to working in the state oyster fishery and to provide crabs for the state crab picking houses in the winter. Of late, Virginia crab picking houses have either shutdown in the winter or brought in crabs from the Gulf of Mexico or other warm weather states to keep their doors open.

On the CMAC proposal, VMRC voted 5-4 later in June to repeal a 16-year ban on winter dredging for blue crabs and to reopen the fishery with a 1.5 million-pound harvest cap.

The approval sparked strong opposition from the State of Maryland and environment groups such as the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

Winter dredging for blue crabs was banned in 2008, and ever since, commercial fishing lobbyists have been working to bring the dredge fishery back.

The 2008 ban was sparked at the time by a disturbing bay-wide crab survey result that in 2007 showed there were 251 million crabs in the bay, down from an 852 million high in 1992.

VMRC closed the fishery in 2008 as part of a bay-wide effort to reduce the blue crab harvest by 34%. That ban on the crab dredge fishery amounted to half of Virginia’s required reduction in catch.

CMAC came back in August 2024 with a 8-5 vote not to reopen the fishery but recommended to VMRC to reconsider it after the 2026 bay-wide stock assessment is complete in 2026.

The Ward Brothers, once owned by the Ward family of Deltaville, is dredging for crabs in Chesapeake Bay. The crab dredge fishery was banned in 2008. VMRC voted to repeal the ban in June. (Photo by Larry Chowning)

At the meeting Monday, VMRC commissioners were reminded of the controversial elements surrounding the fishery as a commissioner suggested VMRC not revisit the opening of the fishery again until after 2026. VMRC, however, is under a court order to consider the reopening of the fishery every year. After the 2008 ban, the annual VMRC “revisit of the fishery” policy was won in court by proponents of the fishery.

VMRC staff was directed to “remain focused on creating a regulatory framework for winter dredging, should conditions in the blue crab fishery permit its reintroduction in the future,” stated a VMRC news release, which leaves the door open for more discussion in the future.

Larry Chowning
Larry Chowninghttps://www.ssentinel.com
Larry is a reporter for the Southside Sentinel and author of several books centered around the people and places of the Chesapeake Bay.