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Foes, friends praise retiring NOAA officialโ€™s approach

December 26, 2017 โ€” Heโ€™s been called a Neanderthal and the most reviled man in the regionโ€™s fishing community. At a public meeting broadcast on national TV, a fisherman once accused him to his face of lying for a living.

As the regional fisheries administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, John Bullard has drawn ire from all sides โ€” fishermen, environmentalists, and politicians alike. His decisions have been routinely controversial, and he has rarely minced words in defending them.

Yet he has also earned widespread respect during his tenure as the regionโ€™s top fishing regulator, the rare public official willing to say what he thinks, no matter how unpopular. Earlier this year, he even publicly criticized his bosses, an offense that nearly got him fired.

As he prepares to retire from one of New Englandโ€™s most influential โ€” and thankless โ€” government positions, Bullard, 70, has few regrets.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

 

Fishermen to managers: Our voices are ignored

November 30, 2017 โ€” The New England Fishery Management Council sent its program review roadshow to Gloucester on Tuesday night to gather opinions on the councilโ€™s performance and the fishery managers were not spared the lash.

The comments delivered Tuesday night at the sparsely attended meeting at the state Division of Marine Fisheries Annisquam Station facility certainly were not new, at least not to anyone who has spent any time speaking with local fishermen about life under the regulatory gaze of the council.

They revolved around a strong belief among local fishermen that management decisions affecting the fishery are made well before the council convenes its public meetings and the scientific data and on-the-water-expertise of local fishermen are ignored or demeaned when it comes to forming policy.

โ€œWe have no faith (in the council),โ€ said retired longtime Gloucester fisherman Sam Novello. โ€œI donโ€™t anyway. Our comments go in one ear and out the other.โ€

Others decried what they called a lack of transparency throughout the process that sets sector allocations and annual quotas, describing a system that keeps the fishermen outside the sphere of influence when it comes to managing the fishery.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times 

 

Fishermen to New England Council: Trust in data needed

September 28, 2017 โ€” One by one, the Gloucester fishermen settled in front of the microphone for those with something to say to the New England Fishery Management Council and, one by one, they delivered their thoughts.

Some of the remarks, such as those from Tom Orrell of Yankee Fleet and Paul Vitale, captain of the Angela & Rose, were short and to the point. Orell wanted to know why the for-hire boats faced so many restrictions in the Gulf of Maine and Vitale simply wants more fish quota. Now.

Joe Orlando of the Santo Pio talked science and cod, while longtime fishermen Al Cottone and Rick Beal adopted more philosophical tones, speaking to the council on the need for a two-lane channel of trust and truth.

โ€œThere is a unique opportunity here to bridge the gap,โ€ Cottone, captain of the Sabrina Maria and executive director of the cityโ€™s Fisheries Commission, told the council. โ€œYou need to restore faith within the industry that youโ€™re actually seeing what we see (on the water).โ€

It was a rare home game for the Gloucestermen, the first time in more than a decade that the council had pitched camp in Americaโ€™s oldest seaport for a full meeting.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

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