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Upcoming Free Safety Trainings for Commercial Fishermen in Marshfield, Massachusetts

March 12, 2018 โ€” The following was released by Fishing Partnership Support Services:

Fishing Partnership Support Services is a non-profit organization devoted to the health, safety and economic security of commercial fishermen and their family members.

Among the current free programs it has scheduled are two trainings this month in Massachusetts. A team of U.S. Coast Guard-certified marine safety instructors will lead both programs.

A summary of the programs is provided below:

Safety and Survival Training for Commercial Fishermen; Thursday, March 22, 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Harbormasterโ€™s Office, 100 Central St., Marshfield

Hands-on training offered at no cost to commercial fishermen by Fishing Partnership Support Services.  Trainers are Coast Guard-certified marine safety instructors.  Includes on-board firefighting, man overboard recovery, rescue helicopter hoist procedures, flooding and pump operations, proper use of survival suits, life rafts and accompanying equipment. Pre-registration recommended.  Contact: Lori Caron, 781-635-0011.

Drill Conductor Training for Commercial Fishermen; Friday, March 23, 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.; Harbormasterโ€™s Office, 100 Central St., Marshfield

One-day course meets latest drill conductor certification requirements for commercial fishermen.  Offered at no cost by Fishing Partnership Support Services.  Conducted by Coast Guard-certified marine safety instructors.  Participants must have attended safety/survival training within past 12 months; upon successful completion, they will be certified to conduct emergency drills.   Session includes classroom instruction and practice drills aboard local vessel.  Pre-registration recommended. Contact: Lori Caron, 781-635-0011.

Scary and True

Falls overboard are the most common causes of death for fishermen at sea, which is why the Fishing Partnership always includes a module in its training programs devoted to showing fishermen how to recover a crew member who has gone overboard.  There are specific steps that must be taken immediately after a fall overboard.  According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were 545 commercial fishermen in the U.S. who died from 2000 to 2010; of those fatalities, 170 (31%) died because they fell overboard.

That is why Man-Overboard Recovery Procedures are one of the centerpieces of Safety and Survival Training.

In addition to the topics listed above, this training also includes a module on Basic First Aid.

Drill Conductor Training โ€“ What Is It For?

Prepares and certifies fishermen to conduct emergency drills at sea.

Federal regulations require monthly drills on commercial fishing boats operating beyond the U.S. boundary line.

Emergency situations addressed in this training include: Man Overboard; Fire; Damage Control; Abandon Ship.

There will be an emergency procedures class in the morning and practice drills aboard a docked vessel in the afternoon.

 

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

25 years ago, the crew of the Andrea Gail was lost in the โ€˜perfect stormโ€™

October 31st, 2016 โ€” At the heart of Gloucester, Americaโ€™s oldest seaport, visitors will find an eight-foot-tall bronze fisherman at the wheel of his ship.

Engraved at the base of the Gloucester Fishermanโ€™s Memorial are the names of more than 3,000 residents who were lost at sea and the following words: โ€œThey that go down to the sea in ships, 1623-1923.โ€ Twenty-five years ago, one ship in particular gained national fame when it was lost during the โ€œperfect stormโ€ of 1991.

The โ€œstorm with no nameโ€ claimed the lives of six fishermen and the captain and crew of the Andrea Gail, a disaster that was later chronicled in Sebastian Jungerโ€™s bestselling book and a film starring George Clooney.

The storm left a trail of destruction from Nova Scotia to Florida, killing 13 people and causing close to $500 million in damage as it lashed the coast from Oct. 26 through Nov. 1 of that year.

Winds upwards of 70 mph โ€œtossed [boats] like beach toys [in] the surf,โ€ The Boston Globe reported on October 31, 1991. A small Marshfield home was even lifted from its foundation, floating in the water and endangering moored boats.

โ€œAt 3 oโ€™clock Wednesday my mother was upset because there was salt water on her lawn,โ€ a Chatham resident told the Globe. โ€œAt 6 oโ€™clock there was no lawn and she was worried thereโ€™d be no house. Our house escaped by some miracle.โ€

Read the full story at The Boston Globe 

MASSACHUSETTS: South Shore ground fishermen skeptical of plan to use digital cameras for monitoring mandate

June 9, 2016 โ€” A program to get New England fishermen using video technology instead of human monitors to track their adherence to catch limits and document fish discarded from boats is getting mixed reviews in South Shore fishing ports.

Longtime commercial fishermen from Marshfield and Scituate said the project to equip some groundfishing boats with digital cameras comes with numerous pitfalls, including cost burdens and concerns about how video footage would be used.

Beginning this week, up to 20 groundfishermen from the Maine and Cape Cod will use three to four cameras to document fish handling on their vessels. At the end of each fishing trip, boat captains will send hard drives to third-party reviewers, who will view the footage and determine how much fish was discarded.

The Nature Conservancy is overseeing the project and hailed it Tuesday as a โ€œnew era in fisheries monitoringโ€ that would be less costly than the current federal mandate, which requires having human monitors aboard boats on a percentage of fishing trips โ€“ at a cost to the fishermen of more than $700 a day.

Last December, South Shore fishermen threw their support behind a lawsuit filed by the nonprofit Cause of Action on behalf of Northeast Fishery Sector 13, which represents fishermen from Massachusetts and New Hampshire down to North Carolina. The federal lawsuit challenges the legality of the federal mandate and came in the aftermath of news that government funding to cover the cost of monitors was running out.

Christopher McGuire, The Nature Conservancyโ€™s marine program director, said his group has begun working with National Marine Fisheries Service personnel in hopes of winning approval for the video-monitoring program.

If video monitoring can deliver verifiable data at an affordable cost, McGuire expects federal approval to come within two years.

South Shore fisherman Ed Barrett questioned whether there would be any cost savings, saying the camera equipment would cost thousands of dollars.

โ€œThen someone has to sit in a cubicle and watch the video,โ€ said Barrett, who lives in Marshfield. โ€œ In a multi-species complex like we have in New England, itโ€™s impossible for the video to pick out which fish are being discarded.โ€

Read the full story at the Patriot Ledger

 

Fishermen from Maine to Cape start monitoring landings by camera

June 3, 2016 โ€” A program to get New England fishermen using video technology instead of human monitors to track their adherence to catch limits and document fish discarded from boats is getting mixed reviews in South Shore fishing ports.

Longtime commercial fishermen from Marshfield and Scituate said the project to equip some groundfishing boats with digital cameras comes with numerous pitfalls, including cost burdens and concerns about how video footage would be used.

Beginning this week, up to 20 groundfishermen from the Maine and Cape Cod will use three to four cameras to document fish handling on their vessels. At the end of each fishing trip, boat captains send hard drives to third party reviewers who view the footage and count the amount of fish that was discarded.

The Nature Conservancy is overseeing the project and hailed it Tuesday as a โ€˜โ€˜new era in fisheries monitoringโ€ that would be less costly than the current federal mandate that requires a percentage of fishing trips to carry at-sea monitors on their vessels at a cost of more than $700 a day.

Last December South Shore fishermen threw their support behind a lawsuit filed by the non-profit Cause of Action on behalf of Northeast Fishery Sector 13, which represents fishermen from Massachusetts and New Hampshire down to North Carolina. The federal lawsuit challenges the legality of the federal mandate and came in the aftermath of news that government funding to cover the cost of monitors was running out.

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

MASSACHUSETTS: South Shore ground fishermen skeptical of plan to use digital cameras for monitoring mandate

June 1, 2016 โ€” A program to get New England fishermen using video technology instead of human monitors to track their adherence to catch limits and document fish discarded from boats is getting mixed reviews in South Shore fishing ports.

Longtime commercial fishermen from Marshfield and Scituate said the project to equip some groundfishing boats with digital cameras comes with numerous pitfalls, including cost burdens and concerns about how video footage would be used.

Beginning this week, up to 20 groundfishermen from the Maine and Cape Cod will use three to four cameras to document fish handling on their vessels. At the end of each fishing trip, boat captains will send hard drives to third-party reviewers, who will view the footage and determine how much fish was discarded.

The Nature Conservancy is overseeing the project and hailed it Tuesday as a โ€œnew era in fisheries monitoringโ€ that would be less costly than the current federal mandate, which requires having human monitors aboard boats on a percentage of fishing trips โ€“ at a cost to the fishermen of more than $700 a day.

Last December, South Shore fishermen threw their support behind a lawsuit filed by the nonprofit Cause of Action on behalf of Northeast Fishery Sector 13, which represents fishermen from Massachusetts and New Hampshire down to North Carolina. The federal lawsuit challenges the legality of the federal mandate and came in the aftermath of news that government funding to cover the cost of monitors was running out.

Read the full story at Wicked Local

Fishermen facing huge cost to pay for at-sea monitors as federal dollars dwindle

November 11, 2015 โ€” QUINCY, Mass.  โ€” The Northeast Fisheries Service Center said Wednesday that money to pay for at-sea monitors on fishing vessels is almost depleted, leaving fishermen and companies that own fishing vessels to cover the cost come January.

Bringing along a monitor to watch over the daily catch will cost local fishermen more than $700 a day.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration program started five years ago, but the NOAA and taxpayers picked up the tab at a total cost of $18.4 million since 2010, said Teri Frady, a spokeswoman for the Gloucester-based fisheries service said.

Frady was unable to say how many fishing boats in the state are currently mandated to have a monitor.

Marshfield fisherman Ed Barrett said the regulation affects any fishing boat working under the federal catch share program.

โ€œNo one can afford to do this,โ€ said Barrett, who is president of the Massachusetts Bay Ground Fishermenโ€™s Association. โ€œThereโ€™s just not that kind of profit margin in this.โ€

Forced to pay $710 to bring along an approved monitor, some fishermen would actually lose money depending on the dayโ€™s catch, he added.

It was unclear Wednesday whether Congress would vote to restore funding to the program.

Read the full story at the Marshfield Mariner

 

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