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Amid negotiations, R.I. fishing industry remains concerned over offshore wind impact, compensation

May 7, 2021 โ€” What is the price of loss of livelihood?

This question is at the center of negotiations between local fishing industry representatives and offshore wind developers. And despite recent efforts to strike a better deal, some local fishermen say no number is high enough to justify the devastation they believe the projects will create for their jobs and industry.

The R.I. Coastal Resources Management Council at the urging of Gov. Daniel J. McKee delayed its approval of the South Fork Wind Farm to give developers Orsted A/S and Eversource Energy more time to reach an agreement with the fishing industry, the Associated Press has reported.

The CRMC through its Ocean Special Area Management Plan gets a say in the federal certification process for wind farm projects within a certain distance of the state coastline. Compensation is intended to offset losses from the construction and operation of the projects to the fishing industry.

The payouts help Rhode Island and Massachusetts fishermen, but there are no such benefits for fishermen in other states, even though many also fish in these areas. Other states also get no say in the federal approval process, unlike Rhode Island.

โ€œRhode Island holds the keys to the kingdom,โ€ said Bonnie Brady, executive director for the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association.

Read the full story at the Providence Business News

Cornell To Survey Suffolk County Fishing Industry About Pandemic Recovery

April 27, 2021 โ€” The Cornell Cooperative and Suffolk County will survey the commercial fishing industry on Long Island. They will recommend ways for fishermen to recover from the pandemic-related shut down of restaurants and seafood markets across the state.

โ€œThey work to be able to provide this food for the nation. And COVID, just basically โ€” in New York, especially where 90% of our seafood market is New York City restaurants that were completely shuttered,โ€ Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, said.

In 2019, Long Island commercial fishermen landed over 19 million pounds of fish valued at over $27 million. Then, the pandemic cut market prices for fish in half. Commercial fishing is a more than $50 million industry on Long Island and employs more than 650 people.

Read the full story at WSHU

NEW YORK: Biden Administration Nixes Hamptons Offshore Wind Sites Near Beaches, Fishing Grounds

April 20, 2021 โ€” The Biden administration announced that it will not lease two offshore wind areas off the Hamptons. The leasing areas were controversial to eastern Long Island residents and the commercial fishing industry.

The Fairways North and Fairways South sites were planned just 15 miles off the coast.

Southampton Town Supervisor Jay Schneiderman says the 800-foot-tall turbines would be a visual eyesore for public and private Hamptons beachgoers โ€” which the state of New York relies on for billions in tourism dollars.

โ€œI believe in [offshore wind],โ€ Schneiderman said, โ€œjust site it further out. Thereโ€™s no reason why they canโ€™t go deeper, into deeper waters, you know, manage the visual impact.โ€

And 1,700 members of the fishing industry sent a letter to the Biden administration to say the construction and the operation of the turbines would starve them of prime fishing grounds. Bonnie Brady with Long Island Commercial Fishing Association has sent these letters before.

โ€œLetโ€™s face it,โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™ve been fighting on this issue for fishermen to get a true seat at the table, not be served for lunch, for 20 years.โ€

Read the full story at WSHU

Offshore Wind Plans Will Drive Up Electricity Prices And Require โ€˜Massive Industrialization Of The Oceansโ€™

February 8, 2021 โ€” The regatta for setting the loftiest targets for offshore wind energy development has set sail.

Today, South Korea announced plans for 8.2 gigawatts of offshore wind. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson recently called for 40 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity to be built in UK waters by 2030. If achieved, it would be one of the biggest British maritime deployments since the Battle of Trafalgar. Meanwhile, the European Union has targeted some than 300 gigawatts of offshore capacity by 2050.

Joe Bidenโ€™s climate advisors are calling for the immediate approval of a slew of pending offshore wind projects. In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo is calling for 9 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity to be built by 2035. Other East Coast governors are also floating multi-gigawatt offshore plans. In all, according to a report issued by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management last June โ€œapproximately 22 gigawatts of Atlantic offshore wind development are reasonably foreseeable along the East Coast.โ€

Hereโ€™s some advice: Take all of these offshore plans with a large grain of sea salt.

One of the leases will put dozens of wind turbines smack on top of one of the best scallop and squid fisheries on the Eastern Seaboard. Numerous groups, including the Fisheries Survival Fund, Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, as well as the Bonackers, a small group of fisherman whose roots on Long Island go back centuries, are adamantly opposed to the wind projects slated for the region. On Friday morning, Bonnie Brady, the executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, and a board member of the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, told me that the long-term environmental impact of the proposed projects isnโ€™t well understood. โ€œWe know these giant machines change wind patterns and they could change marine migration patterns. Letโ€™s do the science before we destroy the ocean and our ocean food supply.โ€

Read the full story at Forbes

New Yorkโ€™s commercial fishing sector appreciates aid, but worries about continued challenges for restaurants

December 10, 2020 โ€” New York is now taking applications from commercial fishermen and other fishing businesses seeking relief from losses they suffered due to the COVID-19 pandemic. And while fishermen are thankful for the assistance, an industry leader said more needs to be done, including helping restaurants.

The funding, a total of $6.7 million, comes to the state through the CARES Act passed in March. That COVID relief package included a total of $300 million in direct aid to commercial fishermen, with the Department of Commerce determining how much each state, tribal nation and territory received.

Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, told The center Square the pandemic created a perfect storm for the seafood industry, and the federal aid will help in an โ€œunusualโ€ year.

โ€œFishermen are essential workers,โ€ Brady said. โ€œNo one wants a handout. These guys just want to be able to work, but in this case, they were able to work, but โ€ฆ the markets for fish were so depressed that your choices were go in and get paid at 1970s prices or donโ€™t go in. But then you donโ€™t have an income.โ€

A couple of items that would really help the industry recover would be for restaurants to rebound and for the return of fish processing in the state.

Read the full story at The Center Square

Making Waves: Offshore Wind and Commercial Fishing

November 17, 2020 โ€” Join NF editors Kirk Moore and Jessica Hathaway for a discussion on the future of offshore wind power with panelists Annie Hawkins, executive director of the Responsible Offshore Development Alliance in Washington, D.C.; Mike Conroy, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermenโ€™s Associations in San Francisco; and Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association; Montauk, N.Y.

Ask questions for the panel in our Member Forum โ€” details below the video.

We will be talking about the latest developments with proposed wind energy projects off the East Coast โ€” and how soon those proposals will come to the West Coast. Topics include the upcoming federal environmental impact statement on the cumulative impacts of Vineyard Wind and other East Coast projects; the status of wind energy planning off the West Coast; the state of relations and communications between fishermen and the wind industry; and fishermenโ€™s concerns with safety and adequate vessel traffic lanes between turbines.

Bonnie Brady: โ€œItโ€™s really important for fishermen to lock arms and work together before they get run over by these things on their historic fishing grounds.โ€

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Sheโ€™s got the scoop: Bonnie Brady of Montauk, New York

October 2, 2020 โ€” โ€œI picked up the chalk,โ€ says Bonnie Brady. โ€œThat was the end of my life.โ€ Twenty years later, Brady, 57, recalls the meeting that changed the course of her life and put a scrappy journalist on her path as a doggedly determined advocate for fishermen and ocean habitat.

โ€œI had never really paid attention to the fishing thing,โ€ Brady adds. She came to fishing through marriage after landing in Montauk, N.Y., an iconic Long Island fishing town.

Like many community fisheries advocates, she recalls that time of her life via council proceedings: โ€œIt was around 2000, Amendment 13โ€ to the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan.

โ€œDave was out fishing, and he said, โ€˜Can you go to this meeting and find out what happens?โ€™โ€ Brady adds that once she got to the fishermenโ€™s forum hosted by the Cornell Cooperative Extension, the room was awash with a range of complaints from a crowd of fishermen. She stood up, grabbed the chalk and started to ask questions. โ€œIf you were to list the top five problems, what are they? I put myself in the middle. Being a reporter, I wanted to see what the main points were. It was obvious these guys had real issues. I had never paid attention to any of that before I met Dave.โ€

Brady married Montauk fisherman Dave Aripotch in 1998. โ€œHeโ€™s a trawler โ€” fluke, scup, black sea bass, squid, whiting. He used to groundfish, but he leases his quota now,โ€ Brady says. โ€œHe started going offshore gillnetting when he was 15. He would sneak off unbeknownst to his parents. He would take off for a couple of weeks!โ€

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Feds delay restart of onboard fisheries monitoring on commercial boats

June 1, 2020 โ€” Federal fisheries regulators on Tuesday delayed a plan to restart a program requiring commercial fishermen to take observers on fishing trips starting Monday, following widespread criticism of the move.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, citing concerns about the spread of the coronavirus, said it would restart the program Aug. 1.

Even while setting the Aug. 1 date, โ€œwe recognize that this public health crisis continues to evolve and changing conditions may warrant re-evaluating these plans,โ€ NOAA said in a statement.

โ€œShould our plans regarding redeploying observers and at-sea monitors change, we will announce any changes as soon as practicable,โ€ the agency said.

Representatives for local fishermen said the restart should be pushed back further.

โ€œCome back to us when thereโ€™s a vaccineโ€ or effective COVID-19 treatment, said Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, based in Montauk.

Read the full story at Newsday

NEW YORK: Montauk Fishermen Launch New Dock to Dish Seafood Delivery Program

May 13, 2020 โ€” Montaukโ€™s fishermen have launched a historic and innovative new initiative to deliver fresh, New York State-certified seafood straight from their boats to local residentsโ€™ doorsteps. The effort, called Dock to Dish 3.0, comes just in time, as restaurant closures and stay-at-home orders have hurt traditional distribution channels and put perishable catches in danger.

Dock to Dish 3.0 is now operating locally as a pilot program for Montauk area residents, offering no-contact subscriptions via an e-commerce platform, with deliveries eventually expanding in June to reach more than 1,000 customers around Long Island and the NY Metropolitan Area each week. More than 500 people have already joined a waiting lists for memberships.

Designed to replace recently crippled and collapsed supply lines, and bring safety and balance to unpredictable market conditions that have arisen during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, this new system creates a distribution channel between Montaukโ€™s commercial fishing fleet and NY consumers. The Long Island Commercial Fishing Association and United Parcel Service (UPS) have stepped up as partners to facilitate the subscription program, which will allow more than two dozen Long Island fishermen to ship New York State-certified fish fillets and sea scallops to members.

Read the full story at Danโ€™s Papers

Long Island fishing industry takes a hit during pandemic

May 13, 2020 โ€” On Tuesday morning, commercial fishing boats sat idle in the water at the Montauk town dockโ€”an uncommon sight, especially this time of year. But lately, itโ€™s become the new normal.

Bonnie Brady, the executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishing Association, said that the majority of East End commercial fishermen, who are essential food production workers, are reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic. Theyโ€™ve lost a tremendous amount of sales since many restaurants closed.

โ€œWhen the restaurants closed, we lost the market with which we sold our fish,โ€ Brady said. โ€œWe need to find ways to create markets, to create processing on the fly, long-term create mobile fish marketsโ€”anything and everything until we get our present system back in order.โ€

Pot fisherman Jim Auteri, who catches lobster, was hoping for a banner season.

Read the full story at Fox 5

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