recreational fishing

IndustryReferenced in 4 bills

View connections →

Fisheries (Sustainable Fisheries Strategy) Amendment Bill 2018

This bill overhauls Queensland's fisheries laws to implement the Sustainable Fisheries Strategy 2017-2027. It introduces harvest strategies as the main tool for managing fish stocks, cracks down on the illegal sale of fish (black marketing) with new trafficking offences and stronger inspector powers, and formally recognises charter fishing and traditional fishing as distinct sectors.

4/9/2018· PASSED· Hon M Furner MP
EnvironmentBusiness & EconomyRegional Queensland
13

Crocodile Control and Conservation Bill 2024

This bill was discharged and did not become law. It would have established a Queensland Crocodile Authority based in Cairns to take charge of all crocodile management across the state. The bill responded to rising crocodile numbers and increasing attacks in North Queensland by creating 'zero-tolerance zones' in populated waterways and expanding commercial opportunities including egg harvesting and Indigenous land management rights.

22/5/2024· Discharged· Mr S Knuth MP
Safety & EmergencyRegional QueenslandFirst Nations

Crocodile Control, Conservation and Safety Bill 2024

This bill would have established a Queensland Crocodile Authority based in Cairns to take charge of all crocodile management across the state. It aimed to make North Queensland waterways safer by creating zero-tolerance zones where crocodiles would be killed or relocated within 48 hours, while also building a commercial crocodile industry and empowering Indigenous landholders to manage and profit from crocodiles on their land. This bill lapsed at the end of the 57th Parliament and did not become law.

21/8/2024· Lapsed· Mr S Knuth MP
Safety & EmergencyFirst NationsRegional Queensland

Crocodile Control and Conservation Bill 2025

This bill sought to create the Queensland Crocodile Authority, a new Cairns-based body responsible for managing all aspects of crocodile control across the state. It aimed to protect North Queenslanders from crocodile attacks by removing crocodiles from populated waterways, while expanding the commercial crocodile industry and empowering Indigenous landholders to manage crocodiles on their land. The bill's second reading failed and it did not become law.

19/2/2025· 2nd reading failed· Mr S Knuth MP
Safety & EmergencyEnvironmentRegional Queensland
8