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Alaskaโ€™s Rural Fishing Communities Are The Next Front Line Of COVID-19

June 8, 2020 โ€” In a normal season, the village of Naknek in southwestern Alaska would be bustling by the end of May, with people arriving from all over the world to work Bristol Bayโ€™s renowned salmon run.

The villageโ€™s population of around 500 swells as over 13,000 workers come to Bristol Bay to spend about six weeks fishing, canning and cleaning the products of the worldโ€™s primary source of wild-caught sockeye salmon.

This year, with the season opening just days away, โ€œit still feels like a ghost town,โ€ said Nels Ure, a second-generation Bristol Bay fisherman. Because of the pandemic, โ€œitโ€™s not business as usual.โ€

Seafood industry workers are under 14-day quarantine orders once they arrive in Alaska from elsewhere. Cannery workers are being quarantined either in hotels in Anchorage before they arrive at the bay, or with a group of other newly arrived employees at their facility, so they can start work while in quarantine together. Fishermen are expected to quarantine on their vessels, either in the boatyard or on the water โ€• or they can stay in their seasonal cabins or homes around the bay, as long as they are self-isolated.

Read the full story at the Huffington Post

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