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Massachusetts: Mitchell โ€˜Will do Everything we Canโ€™ for Fishermenโ€™s Families

December 7, 2017 โ€” With the search called off for the two missing fishermen from the sunken Misty Blue, New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell says the city and its residents will do all it can to offer solace to the families.

โ€œWe will do everything we can to support the families through this,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œItโ€™s going to be hard, but there are other families who have experienced it who can certainly offer a shoulder to them.โ€

Mitchell made the comments during his weekly appearance on WBSM, although he was calling in from Washington, DC. The mayor was in the nationโ€™s capital to speak with officials about issues that directly affect the fishing industry in New Bedford.

The U.S. Coast Guard called off the search for 44-year-old Michael Roberts of Fairhaven and 32-year-old Jonathan Saraiva of New Bedford Tuesday evening, after rescue efforts had failed to locate them following the Misty Blueโ€™s sinking Monday evening.

โ€œItโ€™s unfortunate we need these kind of reminders of just how dangerous commercial fishing is,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œItโ€™s the most dangerous profession out there, and there are way too many families in greater New Bedford who have experienced what these families are experiencing today, and itโ€™s an awful thing.โ€

The Fishermenโ€™s Tribute Monument at Pier 3 has acted as a de facto gathering place in the past for families affected by fishing tragedies, something Mayor Mitchell knows personally.

Read the full story at WBSM

Sen. Warren: New Bedford should keep Rafaelโ€™s fishing permits

October 10, 2017 โ€” And another voice enters the fray.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has weighed in on the debate over the ultimate fate of Carlos Rafaelโ€™s seized commercial fishing permits, saying in a letter to NOAA Fisheries the permits should remain in New Bedford.

โ€œIt has been reported that (Rafaelโ€™s) fishing permits may be cancelled or seized by the federal government and I am urging you to do everything possible to ensure that those permits stay in the port of New Bedford,โ€ Warren wrote to Chris Oliver, NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ assistant administrator for fisheries. โ€œNot doing so has the potential to devastate the local economy and effectively punish numerous innocent workers and businesses in New Bedford for Mr. Rafaelโ€™s crimes.โ€

Warrenโ€™s position aligns her with New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell, who has led the campaign to keep Rafaelโ€™s permits in New Bedford. Other public officials, such as Gov. Charlie Baker, have called for the seized Rafael permits to be redistributed to Massachusetts fishermen.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

Sen. Elizabeth Warren: Keep Carlos Rafael Permits in New Bedford

WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) โ€” October 5, 2017 โ€” In a letter obtained by Saving Seafood this week, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren urged NOAA โ€œto do everything possible to ensure that [fishing permits belonging to Carlos Rafael] stay in the Port of New Bedford.โ€

Writing to Chris Oliver, NOAAโ€™s Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, Senator Warren wrote โ€œthose permits cover a substantial proportion of several important fishing allocations in the area, including of Georges Bank yellowtail flounder, Georges Bank cod, Georges Bank winter flounder, Georges Bank haddock, and southern New England Winter Flounder. Mr. Rafaelโ€™s business accounts directly for three quarters of the value of New Bedfordโ€™ s groundfish, which are necessary to diversify the Portโ€™s fishing industryโ€ฆโ€

โ€œRemoving Mr. Rafaelโ€™s permits from New Bedford would do needless, immense damage not only to hundreds of responsible, law-abiding New Bedford fishermen, but also to the economy of New Bedford at large. That is why New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell and the New Bedford City Council, as well as the Greater Southeastern Massachusetts Labor Council, have urged federal officials to, if possible, reissue Mr. Rafaelโ€™s permits in a manner that retains these important jobs in the community.โ€

Read the letter here

Several other elected officials in New England have also written letters regarding the future of Mr. Rafaelโ€™s permits. Some of those letters are included below.

Read the letter from Mass. Gov. Charlie Baker to NOAA

Read the letter from New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell to NOAA

Read the letter from R.I. Gov. Gina Raimondo to Judge William Young

Read the letter from members of Maineโ€™s Congressional delegation to the Commerce Department

MASSACHUSETTS: Sen. Warren hosts town hall meeting in Marshfield

August 25, 2017 โ€” More than 1,000 people packed into Marshfieldโ€™s Furnace Brook Middle School Thursday night for a town hall meeting hosted by U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-MA.

Residents asked Warren about issues ranging from flood insurance and healthcare to fishing regulations and the national political climate.

Warren was joined on state by 9th District U.S. Rep. William Keating, D-Bourne.

โ€œI really want to hear what she has to say about the current administration and hear what she is going to talk about as far as what we can do to make sure that we are back in the White House in 2020,โ€ Jennifer Mills, of Marshfield, said before the event. Mills took her daughter Shelby, 15, who wanted to ask the senator what the youth of America can do to make a difference.

John Haviland, vice president of the Massachusetts Fishermanโ€™s Partnership, of Marshfield, asked Warren for support on a number of fishing related issues, including controlling the amount of seafood that is imported to the United States and research into the health of the fishing stock.

โ€œWe know how important fishing is, not just to the economy or eastern Massachusetts, but itโ€™s way of life,โ€ Warren said. โ€œItโ€™s a part of Massachusetts and a part of Massachusetts heritage. I am deeply proud of our fishermen, because our fishermen try to work with scientists to get the best possible information so we can have sustainable oceans and sustainable fishing over time. โ€

Read the full story at Wicked Local

Concerns aired about marine monument

June 21, 2017 โ€” Editorโ€™s Note:

Fishing groups have widely criticized the Obama Administrationโ€™s marine monument designation process as opaque, and argued that administration officials did not adequately address concerns raised. Conversely, in this Cape Cod Times article, Priscilla Brooks, Vice President and Director of Ocean Conservation at the Conservation Law Foundation, claimed that the Obama administration adequately took fishermenโ€™s concerns into account before designating the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument.

Ms. Brooks said this was evidenced by the administrationโ€™s decision to reduce the size of the monument by 60 percent from the original proposal.

However, there was never an official Atlantic marine monument proposal from the Obama administration. Fishermen, elected officials, regulators, and concerned shoreside businesses were not apprised of the specifics of the Obama Administrationโ€™s monument plan until the final shape of it was shared just days and hours before it was announced.

The environmental community, including the Conservation Law Foundation, provided a proposal to the Administration, which officials referred to at times in meetings, but always with the caveat that the environmentalist proposal was not an official Administration proposal. At no time before the announcement was imminent did the commercial fishing community have any idea of what action the Administration might take.

It is possible that Ms. Brooks was stating that the monument eventually proposed by the Obama Administration was reduced by 60 percent from the plan that CLF and other environmental groups proposed. Commercial fishermen were apprehensive about the relationship between the Administration and the environmental community with due cause, since in 2015 environmental activists attempted to push a monument designation through the Administration in secret before the Our Ocean conference in Chile.

Ms. Brooks also claimed that โ€œthere was a robust public process.โ€

In the lead-up to the 2016 monument designation, there was one public meeting in Rhode Island where fishermen were allowed just 2 minutes to talk.

There were a number of subsequent meetings in fishing ports, and in the White House complex. But those who attended those meeting largely felt their views were being ignored. In fact, many of them participated in the recent meeting with new Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke.

In July 2016, Eric Reid, General Manager at Seafreeze, who participated in both regional and White House meetings wrote, โ€œNo one in the Obama administrationโ€™s Council on Environmental Quality has put forward an actual, concrete proposal of what an Atlantic monument might look like.โ€ He added, โ€œThe uncertain and opaque nature of the process that has so far surrounded the potential marine monument has left fishermen with no idea as to what areas and which fisheries will be affected, nor which activities will be prohibited.โ€

BOSTON โ€” Fishing groups from around New England met with Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on Friday to air complaints about former President Barack Obamaโ€™s designation of the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument last year.

The monument, the first marine national monument in U.S. Atlantic waters, protects about 4,000 square miles of ocean 150 miles southeast of Cape Cod.

Fishermen say the protected area in which fishing is prohibited hurts their business and places an undue burden on an already heavily regulated industry. But scientists say the area, which is home to hundreds of species of marine life and fragile coral, is an important natural resource that must be protected.

In his proclamation creating the marine monument, Obama prohibited fossil fuel or mineral exploration, all commercial fishing, and other activities that could disturb the sea floor. Scientific research is allowed with a permit. Commercial red crab and lobster fishermen have to phase out their operations within the monument area over the next seven years.

During their meeting with Zinke at Legal Sea Foods on Boston Harbor, fishermen and industry representatives asked the secretary to consider dissolving the monument or changing the regulations within its boundaries and complained about the way it was originally designated.

โ€œAs an American, this brought me to tears at my desk,โ€ said Beth Casoni, executive director of the Massachusetts Lobstermenโ€™s Association. โ€œNo one should have the power to sign people out of work.โ€

Some commercial fishermen said they felt the former administration did not take their concerns into account before designating the monument.

โ€œEven though we were allowed minimal โ€” and thatโ€™s an understatement โ€” input, we received mostly lip service,โ€ said Eric Reid, general manager of Seafreeze Shoreside in Narragansett, Rhode Island. โ€œSmall businesses like me that need stability to grow their business and invest in America are at risk. We can make America and commercial fishing great again.โ€

But Priscilla Brooks, vice president and director of ocean conservation at the Conservation Law Foundation, said the former administration did take fishermenโ€™s concerns into account. Obama reduced the size of the original proposed monument by 60 percent and allowed lobster and crab fishermen a seven-year grace period to continue fishing there.

โ€œThere was a robust public process,โ€ she said.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

Interior secretary visits Mass. to review marine monument

June 19, 2017 โ€” Editorโ€™s Note: At the request of the Department of the Interior, Saving Seafoodโ€™s National Coalition for Fishing Communities helped facilitate a meeting between Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and over 20 representatives of the commercial fishing industry. The meeting also included staff members from the offices of Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Ed Markey (D-MA), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI):

Capping off a four-day New England tour, US Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke visited Boston Friday to meet with local scientists and fishermen in his review of the East Coastโ€™s only โ€” and highly controversial โ€” marine monument.

The Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, located approximately 130 miles off the coast of Cape Cod, covers more than 4,000 square miles. It includes three underwater canyons and four seamounts โ€” mountains rising from the ocean floor โ€”housing dozens of deep-sea corals and several species of endangered whales.

Former president Barack Obama proclaimed the area the countryโ€™s first marine national monument in the Atlantic Ocean in September 2016. The Antiquities Act, signed into law in 1906 by national parks champion Theodore Roosevelt, grants presidents unilateral authority to establish national monuments on federal land.

But now, under President Trump, the fate of the underwater zone is in doubt.

Trump signed an executive order in April directing Zinke to review all national monuments designated over the past 21 years, calling the practice of using executive authority to designate such monuments an โ€œabusive practice.โ€

Zinke met with scientists from the New England Aquarium and the Massachusetts marine monumentโ€™s superintendent from the US Fish and Wildlife Service in the morning, before heading to a roundtable with local fishermen.

โ€œRight now, Iโ€™m in the information collection stage, so everything is on the table,โ€ Zinke said.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

Senators Booker, Menendez Introduce Bill to Ban Seismic Testing in Atlantic

May 27, 2017 โ€” U.S. Senators Cory Booker (D-NJ), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-NJ), Bill Nelson, (D-Fla.), Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) introduced the โ€œAtlantic Seismic Airgun Protection Actโ€™โ€™ a bill to ban oil, gas and methane hydrate-related seismic activities in the Atlantic Ocean. The bill will prohibit the use of seismic airgun blasting โ€” a disruptive and potentially economically damaging method of surveying offshore oil and gas reserves โ€” in the North Atlantic, Mid Atlantic, South Atlantic, and Straits of Florida.

โ€œOffshore fossil fuel exploration of any kind in the Atlantic poses a direct and serious threat to New Jerseyโ€™s economy and environment. My colleagues and I will do everything in our power to protect our coastal communities and those who work in our fishing industry from the potentially disastrous effects of seismic blasting,โ€ said Senator Booker. โ€œOur bill makes it clear that when it comes to offshore oil exploration of any kind, the Atlantic and our coasts are off limits.โ€

โ€œWe are introducing this commonsense legislation because we have a responsibility to be good stewards of our environment, and allowing big oil to use seismic blasting methods that are incredibly disruptive to marine life is a total abdication of that responsibility,โ€ said Senator Menendez. โ€œNew Jerseyโ€™s fishing industry supports tens of thousands of jobs, and the state is home to one of the largest saltwater recreational fishing industries in the nation. I will continue to fight for New Jerseyโ€™s clean coastal waters and rich ecosystems, our small businesses and fishermen who have built and sustained a thriving shore economy against all odds in the wake of Superstorm Sandy, and for all New Jerseyans who know the value of having a clean energy future.โ€

Booker has been an outspoken advocated for a ban on seismic airgun blasting and other harmful extraction efforts in the Atlantic. In Aug. 2015, Booker sent a letter to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) urging a denial of four seismic survey applications for oil and gas exploration in the Atlantic Ocean. Last month, Booker spoke out against President Trumpโ€™s executive order on expediting off-shore drilling, pledging to fight the Administrationโ€™s efforts to erode coastal protections from off-shore drilling.

Read the full story at the Cape May County Herald

MASSACHUSETTS: Warren, Markey speak on port of New Bedford

March 27, 2017 โ€” Behind closed doors, politicians from around the state discussed how to improve the Port of New Bedford Friday afternoon at Seatrade International.

โ€œWe want to make sure the 21st century is just as prosperous and even more so than the 20th and 19th centuries were for New Bedford,โ€ Markey said. โ€œWeโ€™re going to work down in Washington every day to advocate for the commercial fisherman of New Bedford.โ€

Senators Markey and Elizabeth Warren, along with state representatives Bill Strauss, Paul Schmid, Christopher Markey, Robert Koczera and Antonio Cabral joined Mayor Jon Mitchell, City Council President Joe Lopes and Ward 4 Council Dana Rebeiro, discussed policies affecting the port.

The meeting lasted about an hour and according to Ed Anthes-Washburn, the executive director of the Harbor Development Commission, about two-thirds of the discussion revolved around dredging.

โ€œWe heard example after example of what it will mean if we could get proper dredging for new businesses, expanded businesses, more opportunities,โ€ Warren said. โ€œThatโ€™s what we want to see in New Bedford. Thatโ€™s what we want to see here in Massachusetts.โ€

The New Bedford Harbor Development Commission predicts the dredging would create  898 permanent jobs, $65.1 million in wages and $11.5 million in state and local taxes.

โ€œWe have a number of docks in the harbor that are on very shallow water,โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œThere are businesses that want to pull boats up to those docks but canโ€™t because of the shallow water.โ€

According to Washburn, who attended the meeting, lawmakers agreed that Phase V dredging would be most beneficial for the port in terms of cost and reward.

Read the full story at The New Bedford Standard-Times

Billionaire heads toward confirmation as Commerce secretary

February 27, 2017 โ€” The Senate is set to vote on Rossโ€™ nomination Monday evening. Ross easily cleared the Senate Commerce Committee and a procedural vote by the full Senate.

Senators also are expected to move forward on Trumpโ€™s nomination of Montana Rep. Ryan Zinke to lead the Interior Department. If Zinke clears a procedural vote set for late Monday a final vote on confirmation could occur on Tuesday or Wednesday.

Senators from both political parties were deferential to Ross at his nearly four-hour confirmation hearing, which was much more subdued than the confirmation hearings of other Trump nominees.

Former Commerce secretaries have praised him, including one who served under former President Barack Obama.

โ€œI believe his extensive management experience in the private sector, and his understanding of the challenges faced by workers and businesses alike, will equip him well for the job of leading the Department of Commerce,โ€ said Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., chairman of the Commerce Committee.

At least one Democratic senator opposes Ross.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts criticized Rossโ€™ business ties to Russia and the way he ran a mortgage lender during the housing crisis.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at Seattle P-I

Lawmakers call lobster ban โ€˜excessiveโ€™ in letter to EU

September 29th, 2016 โ€” Swedenโ€™s push to list live American lobsters as an invasive species and ban their import by the full European Union is โ€œan excessive and unscientific responseโ€ that jeopardizes its $125 million lobster trade with Massachusetts, according to Rep. Seth Moulton, Sen. Edward J. Markey and the remainder of the stateโ€™s congressional delegation.

In a letter sent today to the EUโ€™s directorate-general for the environment that listed Moulton and Markey as the lead signatories, the Bay State delegation picked up where many North American scientists and fisheries regulators have left off in the escalating international trade tiff.

โ€œIsolated reports of individual American lobsters found in European waters do not constitute the invasion of an alien species,โ€ the delegation wrote to Daniel Calleja Crespo. โ€œThis possible designation is not merited because, as indicated in the data provided to the (EU) Scientific Forum by the United States and Canada, there is no evidence that American lobster can reproduce in waters as warm as those of coastal Europe.โ€

They also insist that the initial Swedish risk assessment, which serves as the basis for the Swedish claim, โ€œfailed to demonstrate that interbreeding between European and American lobsters produces fertile offspringโ€ and an โ€œoutright ban of the importation of live American lobster to the EU is an excessive and unscientific response.โ€

The import ban, they argued, would dismantle the $200 million trans-Atlantic lobster trade between Canada and the United States with the 28 members of the EU and severely and negatively impact the Massachusetts lobstermen and lobster sellers who annually send about $125 million worth of live American lobsters to the EU.

A link to the letter can be found here 

Read the full story at The Gloucester Times 

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