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Opinion: Menhaden fishing is a lifeline for Virginia workers

July 7, 2022 โ€” The following is an excerpt of an op-ed by Ken Pinkard, a 38-year, third-generation menhaden fisherman in Virginiaโ€™s Northern Neck region. It was published yesterday by the Daily Press and the Virginian-Pilot.

The Virginia Saltwater Sportfishing Associationโ€™s Mike Avery inaccurately claims that the Chesapeake Bayโ€™s menhaden fishery is hurting striped bass (โ€œAdvocates call for limits of menhaden fishing in Virginiaโ€). In reality, menhaden fishing is not only sustainable, itโ€™s a critical economic engine for Virginiaโ€™s Northern Neck.

For decades, menhaden fishermen have worked in the Chesapeake Bay alongside crabbers, oystermen and other watermen. The menhaden fishery is currently the largest employer of minority and union workers in rural Northumberland County, and Virginia will not attract โ€œgood-payingโ€ jobs by destroying it. The proposals Avery promotes would have a devastating impact on hardworking Virginians whose families rely on the fishery for their livelihoods.

The economy of the Northern Neck depends on Omega Protein and affiliated companies, just as Detroit depends on GM and Ford. Omega Protein and its fishing partners offer the highest blue-collar wages with the most generous benefits in the Northern Neck. These are union jobs. Every worker has a voice. Some 98% of our Reedville-based employees live in Virginia and 90% live in the Northern Neck.

Read the full op-ed with a subscription at the Daily Press

VIRGINIA: โ€˜Our Sundays Are Differentโ€™: Reedville Fishing Community Shares Their Passion for Family, Community, and Menhaden Fishing

October 19, 2020 โ€” The following was released by Omega Protein:

Sundays have always been different in Reedville, Virginia, a community created and sustained by the menhaden fishery. For over 140 years, Sunday has been the day when the fleet leaves the dock for the open water, and fishermen set out to sustainably harvest menhaden and earn a living.

Yesterday, at the start of another fishing week, fishermen and their families shared their experiences in the new Omega Protein video Our Sundays Are Different.

In the video, fishermen share what Sundays mean to them. Itโ€™s a day when they must say goodbye to their families, churches, and community, but also an opportunity to work a good paying job and provide for their loved ones.

โ€œI do it for one reason, and the same reason my father did it and my grandfather did it before me, and thatโ€™s to earn a livelihood that I can take care of my family comfortably,โ€ says Kenny Pinkard, a fisherman with Omega Protein.

โ€œFor me to be leaving early and go fishing and not watch football, it just makes sense,โ€ says George Ball, another Omega Protein fisherman. โ€œI donโ€™t get paid to watch football, and Iโ€™m the only income in my home.โ€

Family members also share how their Sundays have been shaped by fishing, and how the fishing season has become an important part of their daily lives.

โ€œI would say our Sundays, at least during the fishing season, have always been a little emotional,โ€ says Taylor Deihl, the Marketing and Social Media Coordinator for Omega Protein, whose father is the captain of a menhaden fishing vessel. โ€œThat first Sunday of every season, me and my older sister would always go out to the truck with my dad, rain or shine, to hug him bye. So Iโ€™ve grown up in this industry, throughout my life itโ€™s been my way of life.โ€

Since its founding, Omega Protein has been an integral part of the Reedville community. We are proud to be a part of the regionโ€™s long fishing tradition, and will continue to ensure that, for the people of Reedville, Sundays will always be different.

View the video here

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