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Donโ€™t let wind industry disrupt fishing industry

March 14, 2019 โ€” As owner of Empire Fisheries, one of Connecticutโ€™s largest commercial fishing companies, I testified recently at a hearing before the General Assemblyโ€™s Energy and Technology Committee on two bills (SB 875 and HB 7156) in support of the stateโ€™s plan to procure clean energy from offshore wind turbines in federal waters.

While in support of the bills, I cautioned, as many other fishermen have, that any authorization from the state for procuring wind energy must first guarantee protections that keep fishermen, fish and the ecosystems they rely on, safe. At a minimum, the legislation should require that before any procurement authorization, Connecticutโ€™s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection commissioner consider the latest science at the time of a proposal, to avoid or mitigate impacts to wildlife, natural resources, ecosystems and traditional or existing water-dependent uses, like commercial fishing. The DEEP should start collecting information about the needs of fishing fleets and develop criteria for the wind energy developers to ensure that this traditional water-dependent use is not compromised.

We need to first find the balance that protects our fisheries and fishermen to ensure that one renewable resource, wind energy, does not displace another, fishing.

Read the full story at The Day

New England fishermen worry that wind turbines could impact their catch

December 26, 2017 โ€” NEW BEDFORD, Mass. โ€” East Coast fishermen are turning a wary eye toward an emerging upstart: the offshore wind industry.

In New Bedford, fishermen dread the possibility of navigating a forest of turbines as they make their way to the fishing grounds that have made it the nationโ€™s most lucrative fishing port for 17 years running.

The state envisions hundreds of wind turbines spinning off the cityโ€™s shores in about a decade, enough to power more than 1 million homes.

โ€˜โ€˜You ever see a radar picture of a wind farm? Itโ€™s just one big blob, basically,โ€™โ€™ said Eric Hansen, 56, a New Bedford scallop boat owner whose family has been in the business for generations. โ€˜โ€˜Transit through it will be next to impossible, especially in heavy wind and fog.โ€™โ€™

Off New Yorkโ€™s Long Island, an organization representing East Coast scallopers has sued the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to try to halt a proposal for a nearly 200-turbine wind farm. Commercial fishermen in Marylandโ€™s Ocean City and North Carolinaโ€™s Outer Banks have also sounded the alarm about losing access to fishing grounds.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the Boston Globe

 

Fishermen, Conservationists Go Head To Head Over East Coast Underwater National Monument

May 9, 2017 โ€” New England fishermen are hoping President Donald Trump will reverse an undersea monument designation they say has cut them off from nearly 5,000 square miles of valuable fishing grounds off the coast of Cape Cod.

Trump last month directed the Department of the Interior to conduct a sweeping review of national monument designations over the last two decades, including the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts, which President Barack Obama declared the first undersea national monument in the Atlantic Ocean in September.

The area is a โ€œspectacular landscapeโ€ home to a โ€œwhole diversity of otherwordly creatures that most people are not familiar with,โ€ said Peter Auster, a senior research scientist at Mystic Aquarium who helped secure the designation and has conducted research in the area. There are undersea canyons deeper than the Grand Canyon and extinct underwater volcanoes โ€œtaller than anything east of the Rockiesโ€ with a variety of species of fragile coral, he said.

But Joseph Gilbert, owner of Stonington-based Empire Fisheries, said since the designation, โ€œweโ€™ve been pushed to other areasโ€ creating unnecessary competition and pressure as more boats are fishing in a smaller area. Fishermen, who have been using the area for 200 years, Gilbert said, were given just two months to get out.

Obama used the Antiquities Act of 1906 to declare the area a national monument, and thatโ€™s whatโ€™s at the heart of Gilbertโ€™s objections, he said. Using the Antiquities Act circumvented the New England Fishery Management Council, the normal process for fishery management, and allowed for less input from the industry, Gilbert said.

Read the full story at the Hartford Courant

Connecticut Lawmakers, Proposed Atlantic Monument Met With Opposition From Commercial Fishermen

August 5, 2016 โ€” The following is excerpted from a story published yesterday by the Hartford Courant:

A plan announced Thursday that would designate a unique undersea area 150 miles off the New England coast as the nationโ€™s first Atlantic marine national monument was met with immediate opposition from commercial fishermen.

Connecticutโ€™s congressional delegation, as well as environmental and educational groups, want President Barack Obama to preserve the โ€œNew England Coral Canyons and Seamountsโ€ area, which lies along the continental shelf.

The proposal would dramatically restrict commercial fishing in that area and is drawing fierce opposition from commercial fisherman like Stoningtonโ€™s Bobby Guzzo, who owns and operates two boats.

โ€œThatโ€™s just the government trying to take all our water,โ€ Guzzo said Thursday from aboard his fishing vessel. โ€œIโ€™m dead set against it.โ€

Joseph Gilbertโ€™s Empire Fisheries operates four fishing boats out of Stonington, and he also has problems with the proposed undersea sanctuary. โ€œFishermen are conservationists, too,โ€ Gilbert said, explaining that he believes the proposal โ€œis well intentionedโ€ but simply โ€œgoes too farโ€ without considering the impact on commercial fishing operations and supplies of fish for consumers.

โ€œA lot of these areas are protected already,โ€ Gilbert said.

Commercial fishing groups such as the National Coalition for Fishing Communities argue that there already exist federal laws and regulatory commissions that are set up to protect valuable marine resources like those within the proposed marine sanctuary.

The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, which is responsible for regulating fishing in the region, is also opposed to creation of a protected marine monument off New Englandโ€™s continental shelf. Commercial fishing organizations warn that the plan would hamper fishing for red crab, swordfish, tuna, as well as off-shore lobster fisheries.

Jon Mitchell, mayor of New Bedford, Mass., New Englandโ€™s most important fishing port, has also objected to the proposal, as has Maine Gov. Paul LePage.

Read the full story at the Hartford Courant

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