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PC 608

Para crear la Ley del(la) Comisionado(a) de la Acuicultura y la Pesca del Gobierno de Puerto Rico, crear la Oficina del(la) Comisionado(a) de la Acuicultura y la Pesca del Gobierno de Puerto Rico, establecer sus deberes y funciones, crear el cargo del(la) Comisionado(a) de la Acuicultura y la Pesca, establecer sus facultades, deberes y responsabilidades, crear el Consejo Consultivo sobre Asuntos de la Acuicultura y la Pesca, adscrito a la Oficina para asesorar a la Oficina del(la) Comisionado(a) de la Acuicultura y la Pesca del Gobierno de Puerto Rico, establecer sus funciones; enmendar los Artículos 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11 y eliminar los Artículos 4 y 10 de la Ley Núm. 61 de 23 de agosto de 1990, según enmendada, conocida como la “Ley para el Fomento y Desarrollo de la Industria Pesquera y la Acuicultura”; enmendar los Artículos 3, 5, 7, 8, 10 y eliminar el Artículo 6 de la Ley Núm. 115-1997, según enmendada, conocida como la “Ley para la Promoción y el Desarrollo de la Pesca Deportiva y Recreacional de Puerto Rico”; enmendar los Artículos 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17 y 19 de la Ley Núm. 278-1998, según enmendada, conocida como la “Ley de Pesquerías de Puerto Rico”; y para otros fines relacionados.

2025-2028 Session

Bill creates Puerto Rico's Commissioner of Aquaculture and Fisheries office with expanded authority, restructuring three major fishing laws to centralize industry oversight and regulation.

Referido a Comisión(es)
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Bill Summary · PC 608

Legislative bill overview

Bill PC 608 creates a new Commissioner's Office for Aquaculture and Fisheries in Puerto Rico's government, establishing the position of Commissioner with defined powers and duties, plus a consultative council. The bill simultaneously amends or repeals articles across three major fishing and aquaculture laws (Laws 61-1990, 115-1997, and 278-1998) to restructure and modernize the regulatory framework governing these industries.

Why is this important

Puerto Rico's fishing and aquaculture sectors contribute to food security, employment, and coastal economies, making regulatory clarity and institutional coordination critical. This consolidation centralizes authority under a single Commissioner rather than fragmented agencies, potentially improving policy implementation and resource management—but success depends entirely on how amendments to the three foundational laws are executed.

Potential points of contention

  • Centralization of power: Consolidating fisheries authority into one office could improve efficiency or create bottlenecks; lack of specific detail on Commissioner powers raises accountability concerns
  • Sweeping amendments to existing law: Amending 17+ articles across three laws simultaneously without seeing actual text makes it impossible to assess whether protections for small-scale fishers, recreational fishing access, or environmental safeguards are preserved or weakened
  • Missing stakeholder clarity: No mention of how commercial fishers, recreational fishing advocates, environmental groups, or aquaculture interests are represented in the consultative council's composition and voting structure

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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