I honestly thought I'd never live to see the day - I am cautiously optimistic our state may finally do something to protect the third most sought after fish in the state - our catfish!
AN ACT relating to harvesting of catfish.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky:
SECTION 1. A NEW SECTION OF KRS CHAPTER 150 IS CREATED TO READ AS FOLLOWS:
(1) The department shall establish requirements by administrative regulation, not less than ninety (90) days after the effective ...date of this Act, to govern the harvesting, taking, and selling of catfish by commercial fishermen from waters of the Commonwealth and the buying of catfish by licensed pay lakes, as deemed reasonable and prudent by the department, to ensure proper propagation and prevent depletion of the catfish population.
(2) The department may set more restrictive daily creel and catfish size limits per license holder.
(3) Transporting of live catfish harvested in the Commonwealth across state lines for commercial sale shall be prohibited
The next step is getting a committee hearing. The bill has not yet been assigned to a committee, since it was introduced yesterday. Likely is natural resources & environment, chaired by Jim Gooch. Therefore, we need to ask Rep Gooch to hear the bill and take testimony.
Please find the time (whether you fish for catfish or not) to contact Jim and let him know the enactment is long over due. The commercial overharvest of our state's trophy catfish is devestating to the recreational fisherman. Currently, there is absolutely no creel limit on the harvesting of catfish in the Ohio River by commercial fisherman. The season is open 24/7/365. Commercial harvest and sale of large fish to paylakes is a big business. The ending result is nets at every bend of the river - you don't even know they are there unless you know what to look for. The pressure is simply unsustainable. This is a great day for the conservation of a resource many Kentuckians cherish. You can email Jim here
Annex: [email protected]
Large catfish are the only natural predators for asian carp. The asian carp population is and will explode. Processing plants are currently being built to make use of this species and the commercial fisherman can adapt to fishing for them to replace lost income.



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I don't fish for catfish and I don't consume them either. I think they are nasty, their taste is to strong for my liking and because I am of child bearing age I am not consuming the extra mercury and PCB's they contain. But if someone wants to take a few home, including a large speciman to eat they should be able to do so just as they can with any rough fish providing they are taken using legal methods. Before I end let me check something,,,,, yep they're still in place.