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Market Grows for Community Supported Fisheries Bringing Expanded Benefits to Fishermen

May 3, 2018 โ€” SEAFOOD NEWS โ€” Fishermen from every coastal state in the nation are expanding markets for their catch through community supported fisheries (CSF), a way to get fresh-caught fish into the hands of discerning customers who also want to know more about how and where the fish were caught, and even who the fisherman was.

The growth of CSFs, modeled largely after community supported agriculture (CSA), has been impressive. The first one began in Port Clyde, ME, in 2007 as an effort to revitalize a small villageโ€™s fishing legacy. Port Clyde Fresh Catch sold shares in the early days and subscribers got whatever the small (about a dozen vessels) fleet caught that season.

Today Port Clyde has a retail store, website, and drop-off locations for customers to pick up their fish or purchase without becoming a member.

The largest CSF in the country is Cape Ann Fresh Catch out of Gloucester, with over 700 members. This week, they are featuring โ€œwicked freshโ€ spring scallops for $20/lb. But if you want something else, go online or to their retail store for smoked fish, fresh fish & shellfish, baked goods, and their own line of prepared foods.

While the structure of the 30-plus individual CSFs in the U.S. may differ โ€” some sell shares or subscriptions, others have evolved to processing plants and storefronts โ€” they all operate with three goals in mind: environmental stewardship, economic stability, and social improvements.

In the case of two Alaska-based CSFs, those goals are also the core mission of the organizations that formed the CSF. The oldest of the two, Alaskaโ€™s Own, is part of the Alaska Longline Fishermenโ€™s Association based in Sitka. All profits from Alaskans Own go directly towards supporting fishery conservation research, initiatives to keep fishing access rights local and ensure new entrants to the fishery are able to buy in.

Alaskans Own will deliver fish to their CSF cities of Sitka, Juneau, Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Seattle or will ship anywhere for custom orders.

The Alaska Marine Conservation Coalition, based in Anchorage, formed Catch 49 four years ago and so far are uniquely focused on Alaskans only. Many Alaskans would never have access to Norton Sound red king crab, Kodiak tanner crab or Prince William Sound spot prawns without Catch 49. The CSF delivers to a designated site in Anchorage, Fairbanks or Homer, about two weeks after the ordering period closes.

โ€œAlthough the program is quite consumer focused, we have had a high level of interest from foodservice operators in Alaska,โ€ Catch 49 spokesman Cassandra Squibb said in an interview with IntraFish earlier this year. All profits go towards AMCCโ€™s fisheries conservation efforts.

The process is usually pretty simple. As the Port Orford Sustainable Seafood CFA says: โ€œYou Join. We Catch, Package and Deliver. You Enjoy.โ€

The reason fishermen in central Oregon created a CSF is a familiar story on both coasts.

The large traditional buyers still operating in the area bought fish from the fleet but shipped it elsewhere. โ€œWe set out to pay a fair-trade price to local fishermen for their fish, to process the fish right here in Port Orford and to pay processing employees a fair wage,โ€ the CSF explained on their website.

โ€œWe wanted to sell Port Orford fish in Port Orford, and to provide high-quality, sustainable, traceable fish to Oregonians.

โ€œIn the beginning, we marketed fish at a handful of retail outlets, several high-end restaurants, and farmers markets. CSF members are closer to the communities that catch and process their local seafood. It encourages sustainable fishing practices, and it strengthens relationships between fishermen and consumers.

โ€œThe ocean is a public resource โ€“ itโ€™s as much yours as it is mine.  Fishermen are just licensed agents to access seafood for you,โ€ they said.

As with most CSFs, additional information on where the fish was caught, what gear was used, the name of the vessel and information on the skipper and crew is provided. Indeed, knowing each step in the supply chain and offering a much shorter delivery from dock to kitchen, is a key advantage to CSFs.

Another key is the โ€˜customโ€™ nature of CSFs โ€” every fish is brought on board with care, the beauty of the environment and the responsibility commercial fishermen feel as stewards of it is described and photographed by people who obviously love what they do. Recipes are offered along with stories of the family.

There are now more than 420 locations across the nation where individual fishermen sell their catch.

Local Catch, a network of CSFs supporting the sustainability concept, offers an interactive map to find CSF delivery locations in Canada and the U.S. Among the hundreds shown is one in Wibaux, so far east in Montana itโ€™s almost North Dakota.

Itโ€™s a delivery spot for Cedar Plank Seafoods, a family fishing operation out of Petersburg, AK.

The connection between a CSF delivery station on a ranch in eastern Montana and a third-generation fisherman from Petersburg entails a long-ago grandmotherโ€™s visit to Washingtonโ€™s San Juan Islands, bringing Alaska salmon from her brother back to Wilbaux to serve during the annual cattle branding. Then decades later her granddaughter helps to host pheasant hunters at that ranch, meets hunters who fish in Alaska and who eventually invite her up for a season, where she, a little later, meets the fisherman who will become her husband from Petersburg.

Exactly the kind of story CSF members love to hear.

This story was originally published on Seafood News, it is republished with permission.

 

Costs for at-sea monitors will force many fishermen out of business.

December 18, 2015 โ€” The following was released by the Center for Sustainable Fisheries:

The Center for Sustainable Fisheries fully supports the lawsuit filed in New Hampshire last week by Cause of Action. The Washington-based watchdog group, which focuses its attention on government overreach, is suing the federal government on behalf of our commercial fishermen in New England.

The case is crystal clear. It stems from the high cost for at-sea monitors and the insistence, by NOAAโ€™s intransigent National Marine Fisheries Service, that fishermen must now foot the bill for monitors because the agency has run out of money. This is simply outrageous. The regional administrator for the National Marine Fisheries Service is former New Bedford mayor John Bullard.

Beginning January 1, fishermen who are required to bring monitors on groundfish trips will be billed an estimated $710 daily for their services, an expense previously borne by our government regulators. This mandate comes down at a time that the groundfishery in New England has been declared a disaster, with landings and revenue down and fewer boats fishing. To now burden struggling fishermen with what is undoubtedly a function of government is simply unjust. Furthermore, NOAA has conducted its own study on the costs of monitoring and concluded that upwards of 60 percent of active groundfish vessels would be rendered unprofitable if forced to pay for at-sea monitors. โ€˜Unprofitableโ€™ in this case meaning fishermen going out of business; deprived not only of income but a way of life.

The plaintiffs in this important case are Dave Goethel, a CSF board member and owner of the Ellen Diane, a 44-foot dayboat out of Hampton, N.H., along with Northeast Fishery Sector XIII, comprising thirty-two East Coast fishermen and managed by John Haran in New Bedford. The controversial issue has been simmering for some time. It is now in the hands of the judiciary. In arguing the case Cause of Action will present a number of legal arguments, primarily that NOAA has no authority to compel funding. It does not take a legal scholar to see which way this case should be resolved. Let us hope that justice will prevail.

View a PDF of the release

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