Skip to content
Environment, Government VIC

Cuts to Victorian fisheries officers unites conservationists and fishers

Victorian National Parks Association (VNPA), Victorian Recreational Fishing Peak Body (VRFish), 2 mins read

Victoria’s leading conservation, recreational and commercial fishing organisations have united to oppose the State Government’s plan to axe fisheries officers. They are asking for an immediate reconsideration, warning that if they go ahead, the cuts pose significant threats to marine health, sustainable fish stocks and public safety on Victorian waters.

The Victorian National Parks Association (VNPA), Victorian Recreational Fishing Peak Body (VRFish), Seafood Industry Victoria and the Abalone Council Victoria anticipate devastating consequences if enforcement officers are reduced by two-thirds in areas like Port Phillip Bay and replaced with ‘engagement officers’.

“It’s unprecedented for our groups to come together, but this alliance demonstrates the seriousness of the situation,” said VNPA Nature Conservation Campaigner Shannon Hurley. 

“We all agree that slashing frontline fisheries officers is a big mistake. When conservation groups and fishing interests stand together on an issue, the government should take notice”.

"There is already a non-compliance rate of more than half in marine protected areas according to a statement released by the Community and Public Sector Union. If we cut the number of officers, people who fish illegally will likely feel even more confident breaking the laws without consequences,” Ms Hurley said

Ben Scullin, executive officer from the peak body for Victorian recreational fishers, VRFish agrees, stating: “Further reducing fisheries enforcement just undermines sustainable fishing practices and will ultimately harm the experiences of over one million recreational fishers”.

Representatives from the seafood sector have also voiced concerns. Seafood Industry Victoria and Abalone Council Victoria say reduced oversight of marine waters would likely result in increased illegal fishing and sales of seafood by parties without commercial licences.

The cuts to fisheries officers follow significant reductions across other nature protection agencies. Parks Victoria faces $95 million in budget cuts and an estimated 100 job losses, while 33 staff have been cut from the Officer of the Conservation Regulator.

“So many people depend on the health of our marine landscapes. You can’t be serious about looking after it if you’re cutting the frontline officers who work hard every day to protect it”, Ms Hurley said.

The groups are calling for an immediate reconsideration of the proposed cuts.


Contact details:

VNPA: Shannon Hurley (0433481346) / Lauren Ferri (0422 581 506)

VRFish: Ben Scullin (0416945759)

Seafood Industry Victoria: Matt Wassnig (0402 435 656)

Abalone Council Victoria: Josh Cahill (0424 096 355 )

Abalone Victoria Central Zone: Nick Gall (0407 888 898) 

Retired ex fisheries officer: Dave Burgess (0474524648)

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 07/01/2026
  • 07:14
Australian Conservation Foundation

Extreme heat, extreme need to stop gas expansion

With record temperatures, catastrophic floods in Queenslandandextreme fire danger across half the country, the nationalenvironment groupis demandingthe Albanese governmenthaltitsrecklessexpansion of the gas industry, which isdriving more dangerous and costly disasters. “This heatwave is a sobering reminder of the consequences of successive Australian governments that have prioritised fossil fuel corporate profiteering over a safe climate,”Acting Climate and EnergyProgram ManagerAnnika Reynolds (they/them) said. “The increase in dangerous climate disasters is making Australians unsafe and threatening the people and places we care about and love. “Let’sbecrystal clear: no matter where Australiancoal andgas is burnt, itfuelsextreme heat andbushfires here at home. “Australians are joining…

  • Environment, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 07/01/2026
  • 00:01
Climate Media Centre

TALENT ALERT: Climate pollution turns up the heat across Australia

Wednesday 7 January, 2026 For immediate release Australians will suffer under extreme heat over the coming days, with the Bureau of Meteorology warning of the most significant heatwave to hit south-eastern Australia in six years. Large parts of the country are facing multi-day temperatures well above average, with dangerous heat compounding fire danger across already dry landscapes and posing risks to all Australians, with outdoor workers, young children, the elderly and people on low incomes and those experiencing homelessness particularly vulnerable. This heatwave is not an anomaly, it reflects a clear trend of heatwaves reaching higher temperatures and lasting longer…

  • Emergency Services, Environment
  • 06/01/2026
  • 05:01
Emergency Leaders for Climate Action and the Climate Council

Experts Sound Alarm for Australia on Urban Fire Risk like LA

January 6 2026 At least 6.9 million Australians living on the expanding fringes of our capital cities could be at risk from urban fires supercharged by climate pollution, a joint report from former Australian fire chiefs and the Climate Council has found. The report comes after devastating fires claimed the life of a firefighter, and destroyed dozens of homes across New South Wales and Tasmania in December 2025. The report When Cities Burn: Could the LA Fires happen here? details how climate pollution, from burning coal, oil and gas, is turbo-charging dangerous fire conditions. This is making LA-style urban blazes…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.