The Council will meet again via webinar on Wednesday, February 10 and Thursday, February 11, 2021. A portion of the meeting will be conducted jointly with the ASMFC’s Bluefish Management Board. During this meeting, the Council will receive presentations on North Atlantic right whale issues, aquaculture projects, and offshore wind updates. The Council will also review staff white papers on river herring and shad issues, and the Council and Bluefish Board will meet jointly to approve a joint public hearing document for the Bluefish Allocation and Rebuilding Amendment. An agenda and webinar connection details are available on the February 2021 Meeting Page. Briefing materials will be posted as they become available.
Questions? Contact Mary Sabo, msabo@mafmc.org, (302) 518-1143.
Learn about regulatory, operational and management characteristics of electricity transmission from offshore wind projects, and the challenges of shifting to a new planning paradigm offshore. Rob Gramlich of Grid Strategies, LLC will provide an overview of how the grid works. Mark Kalpin of Holland & Knight will address regulatory considerations for offshore wind transmission planning.
Other experts have been invited to speak about New Jersey’s recent announcement to align state offshore transmission policy with the grid operator’s planning process. Presentations will be followed by discussion and Q&A.

Come join us for the “Hooked on Ocean Acidification” mini-series on Thursday evenings,
from February 18 to March 11. All four sessions will be held virtually, via ZOOM, from 6:30-8:00 PM.
Through this program, we aim to provide Mid-Atlantic anglers, party and charter boat captains and crew, and recreational fishing industry stakeholders with the latest scientific research and apps to understand how ocean acidification may affect your local fisheries and what can be done to reduce the impacts.
Contact Kirstin Wakefield at info@MidACAN.org for more information.
To register, please visit the following link: https://tinyurl.com/y5g8hsfb
You are invited to attend the MACAN February webinar, “Climate Change and Submerged Cultural and Heritage Resources in the Mid-Atlantic,” on February 25, 2021 at 1:00PM EDT. Maryland’s State Underwater Archaeologist, Dr. Susan Langley, will discuss how climate change, including ocean acidification, impacts Mid-Atlantic cultural and heritage resources.
Although our maritime heritage is young compared to the Vikings’, our country has thousands of cultural resources such as shipwrecks, shell middens, and sunken vessels from WWII, that lie under or adjacent to the Mid-Atlantic’s coastal waters. This presentation examines how different aspects of climate change, including ocean acidification, impact our heritage resources. It defines the diverse cultural materials affected, and considers the potential and resulting effects on archaeological research, the environment, and the economy. In addition, means of addressing these effects, both active and proposed are discussed. One example involves a survey of archaeologists associated with government agencies, academic institutions, and non-profit organizations who all placed ocean acidification in the top three most damaging climate change threats they face in their work. This has led to increased networking at a global level as we enter the U.N. Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development.
Please register at: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6145951551914346000
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.
The Council will meet April 6-8, 2021 in Galloway, NJ. The meeting will be held at the Seaview, a Dolce Hotel (401 South New York Rd., Galloway, NJ 08205 609-652-1800).
Additional information will be posted on this page as it becomes available.
Questions? Contact Mary Sabo, msabo@mafmc.org, (302) 518-1143.
We invite you to join us April 12, 2021 at 1PM EST for our next webinar, State-Led OA Action Planning in the US Mid-Atlantic.
Co-hosted by the OA Alliance and the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Acidification Network, the 60 minute webinar will dive deeper into specific components of OA Action Planning in Maryland, New Jersey and across U.S. Mid-Atlantic States. Collectively, presentations will touch on partnerships, data, research, projects and policy frameworks that are informing states’ OA Action Plan recommendations.
Please register at: https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/5804464133441407245
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

BOEM is hosting a Virtual New York Bight Intergovernmental Renewable Energy Task Force meeting on April 14 and 16, 2021, which will include an update on BOEM’s renewable energy planning activities and an opportunity for the public to provide input on a draft Proposed Sale Notice for the New York Bight.
For more information and to register for the Task Force Meeting, visit the New York Bight Task Force Virtual Meeting Room. Times will be announced soon.
Sincerely,
NYSERDA Offshore Wind Team

BOEM is hosting a Virtual New York Bight Intergovernmental Renewable Energy Task Force meeting on April 14 and 16, 2021, which will include an update on BOEM’s renewable energy planning activities and an opportunity for the public to provide input on a draft Proposed Sale Notice for the New York Bight.
For more information and to register for the Task Force Meeting, visit the New York Bight Task Force Virtual Meeting Room. Times will be announced soon.
Sincerely,
NYSERDA Offshore Wind Team

Monday, May 3, 2021 12:30 – 4:00 PM
Tuesday, May 4, 2021 9:30 AM – 3:00 PM
Wednesday, May 5, 2021 9:15 AM – 1:45 PM
Thursday, May 6, 2021 9:30 AM – 12:30 PM
For more information please visit the Forum web page.

For Ocean Month MARCO is holding a very special webinar with Dr. Carol Anne Clayson and Ryan Gasbarro on climate change and its impacts to our deep sea corals on June 24, 2 – 3 PM.
Dr. Carol Anne Clayson of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution will talk about air-sea interactions and how climate changes are affecting water movement through the ocean, atmosphere, land and back again, as well as changes in the physical ocean environment and developments to improve predictability for weather and climate information. Mr. Ryan Gasbarro of Temple University will present his current work on creating ensemble habitat suitability models for Lophelia pertusa, and projected distribution and abundance models under four carbon emission scenarios.
Please register at https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/5630964498836952080