December 19, 2024 — A long-running debate over bycatch in the pollock fishery has moved closer to urban Alaska with a new set of proposals aimed at regulating the annual harvest in Prince William Sound. This week, the state Board of Fisheries is considering four proposals that could place sharp restrictions on or even close down the small pollock trawl fishery in the waters east of Anchorage.
Supporters of the proposals point to state data showing that approximately 15 boats, mostly from Kodiak Island, unintentionally catch about 900 king salmon and 900 rockfish each year in their wide-mouth trawl nets. They argue that these fish are crucial to subsistence harvests for local communities, especially the village of Chenega. Boyd Selanoff, a member of the Chenega tribal council, expressed concern about the impact on their way of life.
“The language is disappearing. The culture is disappearing, the subsistence traditions and education are disappearing,” Selanoff reported by the Anchorage Daily News and Nathaniel Hertz. “One of the main sources of life in Prince William Sound — for all of us, not just Chenega — is a healthy fish stock.”