April 3, 2019 โ BOSTON โ While most of the thousands of attendees to the Boston seafood show were there to buy and sell fish or otherwise drum up business for their companies, Ryan Mulvey was on a โfact-finding missionโ of sorts.
Mulvey, an attorney, along with a team of others from the Cause of Action Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, spent the show speaking to fishermen about what it refers to as โoverregulationโ in the fishing industry. This can include issues such as requirements that fishermen bear the cost of having observers on board, the development of offshore wind farms curtailing fishing areas, cuts to quota and problems with the โreliabilityโ of federally conducted stock assessments, he told Undercurrent News.
โWe want to hear stories and we had a huge number of fishermen come up to us and tell us โOh, weโre struggling so much. Every year weโre allowed to catch fewer and fewer fish and weโre making less and less money and new and heavier regulatory costs get imposed on usโ,โ Mulvey said.
The institute advocates for what he called โreasonable regulation that still preserves economic freedomโ and has been active in litigating on behalf of fishermen suing the federal government in cases of โgovernment overreachโ, Mulvey said. It does this through legal action as well as by launching investigations through the aggressive use of public records laws like the Freedom of Information Act.
Read the full story at Undercurrent News