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Fishermen say offshore wind surveys rip up gear: โ€˜There has to be accountabilityโ€™

December 8, 2021 โ€” East Coast fishermen told of their gear torn up by survey vessels working for offshore wind energy developers, as the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management opened its public process toward mitigating the newcomer industryโ€™s effect on seafood providers.

Conch fisherman James Hahn said he witnessed a survey boat running over his trap lines off Maryland, and hailed the vessel on VHF radio.

โ€œThey said they had the right to survey,โ€ Hahn told BOEM officials in an online Zoom meeting Monday. โ€œI finally had to get in front and turn my boat sideways to get them to stop.โ€

Developers US Wind have notified fishermen in the Delmarva region that more survey work is scheduled in December and gear conflicts are possible, said Hahn.

โ€œThatโ€™s not how you work with fishermen,โ€ he said. โ€œTheyโ€™re basically taking over the ocean and donโ€™t give two shits about us anymore.โ€

Read the full story at National Fisherman

 

Atlantic Fishermen in NCLA Video Explain the Need to Reel in NOAAโ€™s at-Sea Monitor Rule

August 2, 2021 โ€” The following was released by the New Civil Liberties Alliance:

The New Civil Liberties Alliance released a video today outlining why it is unconstitutional to force Atlantic herring fishermen to fund government-mandated monitors at sea. It is โ€œthe equivalent of having a cop in your car whoโ€™s policing you while you drive, and you have to pay his salary out of your own pocket,โ€ said Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison & General Manager for Seafreeze, Ltd. about the rule being challenged in Relentless Inc., et al. v. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, et al.

The Relentless Inc., Huntress Inc., and Seafreeze Fleet LLC are small businesses of high-capacity freezer trawlers incorporated in Rhode Island and Massachusetts that have commercially fished Atlantic herring as well as Loligo and Illex squids, butterfish, and Atlantic Mackerel for more than thirty years. The rule penalizes NCLAโ€™s clients unfairly by making them pay for herring monitors even when fishing for other catches.

NCLA, a nonpartisan, nonprofit civil rights group, represents these private fishing companies in their lawsuit against the Department of Commerce (DOC), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), and the New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC). The at-sea monitor mandate, issued in 2018, is unlawfully โ€œindustry-funded.โ€ These agencies do not have statutory authority from Congress to order additional industry funding for a program that the agencies think is underfunded, but they have issued a rule that threatens the livelihoods of fishermen regardless.

Earlier this week, NCLA presented oral argument before the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island. Both sides have moved for summary judgment.

Read the full release here

WTAS: Re-opening of the Northeast Canyons, Marine National Monument to Commercial Fishing

June 5, 2020 โ€” The following was released by The Office of Congressman Rob Bishop (R-UT):

Today, President Trump announced the re-opening of the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument for commercial fishing. Below is what they are saying:

โ€œAmerican fishermen work hard to support their communities, provide food security to the nation, and protect the environments where they make their livelihoods. President Obama swept aside a public, science-based fishery management process with the stroke of a pen. That was a mistake. Ranking Member Bishop deserves thanks for his work in opposing that sort of misuse of the Antiquities Act. We applaud todayโ€™s presidential proclamation on the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Monument for restoring the open, collaborative, and science-based council management process that has made our fisheries a model for the world.โ€ โ€“ Robert B. Vanasse, Executive Director, Saving Seafood

โ€œWe want to thank President Trump for recognizing the prior Administrationโ€™s actions pursuant to the Antiquities Act to unilaterally close nearly 5,000 square miles to commercial fishing operations were harmful to U.S. fishermen and their coastal communities and undermines our countryโ€™s seafood production.โ€ Mr. Reichle added that โ€œWhile everyone seems to agree our Nationโ€™s fisheries management system achieves sustainability and our seafood production some of the safest and healthiest in the world โ€” it is remarkable that anyone would prohibit access to large productive fishing areas with no scientific justification and the stroke of an executive pen. This President got it right and our industry appreciates the support.โ€ โ€“ Jeff Reichle, Chairman, Lundโ€™s Fisheries, Inc.

โ€œSeafreeze extends our sincere thanks to President Trump for re-opening the Northeast Monument to our commercial fishing vessels. Our vessels have sustainably harvested product in the Monument area for over 30 years, and its closure meant a loss of millions of dollars a year to our company. We applaud President Trumpโ€™s decision to support our American commercial fishermen and the worldโ€™s most sustainable fisheries.โ€ โ€“ Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison, Seafreeze Ltd.

โ€œToday, President Trump acknowledged the tremendous social and economic contributions our American Commercial Fishing Industry and the small businesses that support us provide to the American public. This Presidential support comes at a critical time for our Industry and the Nation as a whole. For this, Mr. President, we are grateful.โ€ โ€“ Eric Reid, Rhode Island

Second lawsuit filed in at-sea monitoring dispute

March 10, 2020 โ€” A second lawsuit has been filed in a U.S. federal courthouse against a rule, scheduled to take effect Monday, 9 March, that would require Atlantic herring fishermen to pay for independent monitors aboard their vessels.

Seafreeze Fleet LLC and two vessels it owns filed the lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Commerce, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and NOAA Fisheries in U.S. District Court in Rhode Island last week. It comes a couple of weeks after New Jersey fishermen filed a similar lawsuit over the rule.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Fishing industry says it doesnโ€™t endorse Vineyard Windโ€™s โ€˜consensus planโ€™ for transit lanes

December 11, 2018 โ€” The fishing industry said Vineyard Wind distorted its words on Monday.

A release by Vineyard Wind said the offshore wind company endorsed a โ€œconsensusโ€ transit corridor plan supported by the fishing industry, but multiple people within the fishing industry told The Standard-Times they didnโ€™t support or endorse the plan.

The consensus within the industry is a 4-mile wide transit lane. Vineyard Windโ€™s endorsed plan called for 2-mile wide corridors.

โ€œItโ€™s frustrating for the fishing because weโ€™re coming with options even though weโ€™re losing tremendous ground and weโ€™re losing a lot of traditional transit (lanes),โ€ said Meghan Lapp, a fisheries liaison for Seafreeze Ltd. โ€œBut weโ€™re still trying to come to the table to make something work and in light of this press release, it doesnโ€™t really seem like itโ€™s being reciprocated.โ€

The model endorsed by Vineyard Wind is one developed in a September meeting in New Bedford. Eric Hansen, a New Bedford scalloper, attended the meeting and remembered the plan being thought of as a worst-case scenario for the fishing industry.

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

Science Center for Marine Fisheries Funds Three New Projects at Fall Meeting

November 28, 2018 โ€” The following was released by the Science Center for Marine Fisheries:

At its fall meeting in Middletown, Rhode Island, the Industry Advisory Board of the Science Center for Marine Fisheries (SCeMFiS) awarded over $164,000 in grants for promising new marine science research.

The projects cover the impact of climate change on shellfish populations; how to properly determine the age of one of the oceanโ€™s longest-lived species; and how offshore wind energy is likely to affect fisheries. All of the funded projects further the mission of the Center, which connects leading researchers and their partners in the industry to address critical marine science needs.

As part of the National Science Foundationโ€™s Industry/University Cooperative Research Program, SCeMFiS used this meeting to set the shared priorities of our researchers from around the country and the industry advisors from the shellfish and finfish fisheries who approved the research.

โ€œWe see this as a great opportunity to partner with the scientific community, and we are looking forward to continue working with SCeMFiS on projects that affect our fisheries,โ€ said Meghan Lapp, the Fisheries Liaison for Seafreeze, one of SCeMFiSโ€™ Rhode Island members.

A full description of the funded projects is included below:

  • โ€œThe influence of global warming on the Atlantic surfclam and the ocean quahogโ€ โ€“ Dr. Eric Powell (University of Southern Mississippi) and Dr. Roger Mann (Virginia Institute of Marine Science) will lead the study, which will examine the extent to which the populations of surf clams and ocean quahogs have shifted offshore in response to changing ocean temperatures. The study will sample and date ocean quahog and surfclam shells to identify the likelihood of a continued future shift in the speciesโ€™ range. ($56,197 in funding approved)

 

  • โ€œOcean quahog population dynamics: validation of estimation procedures for an age-at-length key โ€“ supplementโ€ โ€“ Dr. Powell and Dr. Mann will follow up on previous SCeMFiS research on how to properly age ocean quahogs in the northwest Atlantic. Ocean quahogs can live to over 200 years old, but their growth rates vary considerably over time. The study would continue efforts to develop a reliable way to estimate ocean quahog ages at particular lengths, known as an age-at-length key. ($29,037 in funding approved)

 

  • โ€œOceanography special issue on the effects of wind energy development on fisheries and the ecology of the continental shelfโ€ โ€“ Dr. Eileen Hofmann (Old Dominion University) and Dr. Powell will work to develop a special issue of the scientific journal Oceanography, that will include 10-12 peer-reviewed papers presenting an overview on the state of research related to offshore wind development. They will cover, among other topics, the challenges faced by offshore wind development and the effect it has on nearby fisheries, fish populations, and the broader ocean ecology. ($79,200 in funding approved)

About SCeMFiS

The SCeMFiS mission utilizes academic and fisheries resources to address urgent scientific problems limiting sustainable fisheries. SCeMFiS develops methods, analytical and survey tools, datasets, and analytical approaches to improve sustainability of fisheries and reduce uncertainty in biomass estimates. SCeMFiS university partners, University of Southern Mississippi (lead institution), and Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, are the academic sites. Collaborating scientists who provide specific expertise in finfish, shellfish, and marine mammal research, come from a wide range of academic institutions including Old Dominion University, Rutgers University, University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, University of Maryland, and University of Washington.

The need for the diverse services that SCeMFiS can provide to industry continues to grow, which has prompted a steady increase in the number of fishing industry partners. These services include immediate access to science expertise for stock assessment issues, rapid response to research priorities, and representation on stock assessment working groups. Targeted research leading to improvements in data collection, survey design, analytical tools, assessment models, and other needs to reduce uncertainty in stock status and improve reference point goals.

Read the full release here

National Coalition for Fishing Communities: An Open Letter to Americaโ€™s Chefs

October 31, 2018 โ€” WASHINGTON โ€” The following was released by Saving Seafoodโ€™s National Coalition for Fishing Communities:

Members of the National Coalition for Fishing Communities have long believed that the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA) is one of the great success stories in fisheries management. Originally co-sponsored in the House over 40 years ago by Reps. Don Young (R-Alaska) and Gerry Studds (D-Massachusetts), the MSA has become a worldwide model, and is one of the reasons the U.S. has some of the best-managed and most sustainable fish stocks in the world. The bill is named for its Senate champions, Warren Magnuson (D-Washington) and Ted Stevens (R-Alaska).

But we are concerned by a new โ€œnationwide #ChefsForFish campaign targeted at the new 2019 Congress, to launch after the elections in early November,โ€ being organized by the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which the Aquarium calls the โ€œnext phaseโ€ of its โ€œdefenseโ€ of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The Monterey Bay Aquarium described this campaign in an October 25 email sent to its โ€œBlue Ribbon Task Force chefs.โ€ The email asked this network of chefs to support the โ€œPortland Pact for Sustainable Seafoodโ€ (attached).

On the surface, the Portland Pact matter-of-factly states sound principles:

  • โ€œRequiring management decisions be science-based;
  • Avoiding overfishing with catch limits and tools that hold everyone accountable for the fish that they remove from the ocean; and
  • Ensuring the timely recovery of depleted fish stocks.โ€

However, in the last Congress, the Monterey Bay Aquarium used similar language to falsely characterize legitimate attempts to pass needed improvements to the MSA as betraying these principles. In fact, these changes would have made the landmark law even better.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium has repeatedly called on Congress to reject efforts, such as H.R. 200, which passed the U.S. House in July, and was sponsored by the now Dean of the House Don Young, that would amend the Act to introduce needed updates for U.S. fisheries management. If the chefs being asked to sign onto the Portland Pact were to talk to our fishermen, they would know how important these reforms are for the health of our nationโ€™s fishing communities.

Any suggestion that the original co-sponsor of the bill would, 40 years later, act to undermine Americaโ€™s fisheries, is inappropriate. In fact, most of the โ€œfishing groupsโ€ that opposed Congressman Youngโ€™s bill, are financially supported by environmental activists and their funders.

No legislation, no matter how well designed is perfect or timeless. In fact, Congress has twice made significant revisions to the MSA, first in 1996 with the passage of the Sustainable Fisheries Act and in 2007 with the MSA Reauthorization Act. Like many other valued and successful laws, the Magnuson-Stevens Act is both working well, and in need of updates.

We agree that โ€œmanagement decisions be science-based.โ€ One of the most significant issues with the current MSA is that it requires that fish stocks be rebuilt according to rigid, arbitrary timeframes that have no scientific or biological basis. Bills like H.R. 200, officially the Strengthening Fishing Communities and Increasing Flexibility in Fisheries Management Act, would instead require that stocks be rebuilt according to an appropriate biological timeframe determined by the regional councils that manage the stocks.

H.R. 200 would also introduce other important measures that would better allow the councils to adapt their management plans to fit changing ecological conditions and the needs of fishing communities, which will become increasingly important as our coastal areas experience the effects of climate change.

American fishermen, like many American chefs, are committed to sustainable fishing and healthy oceans. Our businesses need sustainable, abundant fish stocks for us to make a living, and we all want a thriving resource that we can pass down to the next generation. We would never endorse a law that would threaten the long-term survival of our environment or our industry. That is why we endorse changes to the MSA that would ensure both.

We ask that any chef who is considering signing onto the Monterey Bay Aquarium letter to Congress first consult the local fishermen who supply them with fresh, quality products to learn how this law affects their communities.

NCFC members are available to connect chefs with seafood industry leaders, who would be happy to discuss how the MSA can be updated to help both fish and fishermen.

Sincerely,

Alliance of Communities for Sustainable Fisheries
Kathy Fosmark, Co-Chair
CA

Atlantic Red Crab Company
Jon Williams, President
MA

California Wetfish Producers Association
Diane Pleschner-Steele
CA

Delmarva Fisheries Association
Capt. Rob Newberry, Chairman
MD, VA

Fishermenโ€™s Dock Co-Op
Jim Lovgren, Board Member
NJ

Garden State Seafood Association
Greg DiDomenico, Executive Director
NJ

Hawaii Longline Association
Sean Martin, Executive Director
HI

Long Island Commercial Fishermenโ€™s Association
Bonnie Brady, Executive Director
NY

Lunds Fisheries, Inc.
Wayne Reichle, President
CA, NJ

Rhode Island Fishermenโ€™s Alliance
Rich Fuka, Executive Director
RI

Seafreeze, Ltd.
Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison
RI

Southeastern Fisheries Association
Bob Jones, Executive Director
FL

Viking Village
Jim Gutowski, Owner
NJ

West Coast Seafood Processors Association
Lori Steele, Executive Director
CA, WA, OR

Western Fishboat Owners Association
Wayne Heikkila, Executive Director
AK, CA, OR, WA

PRESS CONTACT

Bob Vanasse
bob@savingseafood.org 
202-333-2628

View the letter here

 

Nantucket Squid Restrictions Not Approved by Mid Atlantic Council

December 19, 2017 โ€” SEAFOOD NEWS โ€” The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council voted against a proposed squid buffer zone framework off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts.

According to The Independent, Narragansett Town Council members signed a letter requesting that the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council reject the buffer zone for the summer squid fishery off Nantucket. The council members wrote that โ€œany exclusion zone or restrictionsโ€ could potentially result in โ€œeconomic devastation,โ€ not only for the fishing industry, but other businesses and the town in general.

โ€œSquid is the economic foundation of Narragansettโ€™s fishing industry and it is necessary that access to that valuable resource be preserved,โ€ the letter reads. โ€œWe therefore respectfully request that the council protect the access of the squid fishery to these very important and historic fishing grounds.โ€

Meghan Lapp, fisheries liaison for Seafreeze Ltd., told the Independent that: โ€œA potential squid buffer zone off the south of Nantucket and Marthaโ€™s Vineyard, itโ€™s federal waters. So there are a handful of fishermen from Nantucket who do not want squid fishing in Nantucket south of the island. So the commercial squid fishery, it occurs in the summertime south of Nantucket. It has been occurring for decades, since at least the `970s. There have been squid vessels commercially fishing squid there since the โ€˜70s at least.โ€

Nantucket charter boat captains have been complaining about the squid fishery causing a decline in striped bass. The ban was proposed due to pressure from the recreational fishing industry, but is now will not  take place in federal waters.

This story originally appeared on Seafoodnews.com, a subscription site. It is reprinted with permission.

 

Concerns aired about marine monument

June 21, 2017 โ€” Editorโ€™s Note:

Fishing groups have widely criticized the Obama Administrationโ€™s marine monument designation process as opaque, and argued that administration officials did not adequately address concerns raised. Conversely, in this Cape Cod Times article, Priscilla Brooks, Vice President and Director of Ocean Conservation at the Conservation Law Foundation, claimed that the Obama administration adequately took fishermenโ€™s concerns into account before designating the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument.

Ms. Brooks said this was evidenced by the administrationโ€™s decision to reduce the size of the monument by 60 percent from the original proposal.

However, there was never an official Atlantic marine monument proposal from the Obama administration. Fishermen, elected officials, regulators, and concerned shoreside businesses were not apprised of the specifics of the Obama Administrationโ€™s monument plan until the final shape of it was shared just days and hours before it was announced.

The environmental community, including the Conservation Law Foundation, provided a proposal to the Administration, which officials referred to at times in meetings, but always with the caveat that the environmentalist proposal was not an official Administration proposal. At no time before the announcement was imminent did the commercial fishing community have any idea of what action the Administration might take.

It is possible that Ms. Brooks was stating that the monument eventually proposed by the Obama Administration was reduced by 60 percent from the plan that CLF and other environmental groups proposed. Commercial fishermen were apprehensive about the relationship between the Administration and the environmental community with due cause, since in 2015 environmental activists attempted to push a monument designation through the Administration in secret before the Our Ocean conference in Chile.

Ms. Brooks also claimed that โ€œthere was a robust public process.โ€

In the lead-up to the 2016 monument designation, there was one public meeting in Rhode Island where fishermen were allowed just 2 minutes to talk.

There were a number of subsequent meetings in fishing ports, and in the White House complex. But those who attended those meeting largely felt their views were being ignored. In fact, many of them participated in the recent meeting with new Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke.

In July 2016, Eric Reid, General Manager at Seafreeze, who participated in both regional and White House meetings wrote, โ€œNo one in the Obama administrationโ€™s Council on Environmental Quality has put forward an actual, concrete proposal of what an Atlantic monument might look like.โ€ He added, โ€œThe uncertain and opaque nature of the process that has so far surrounded the potential marine monument has left fishermen with no idea as to what areas and which fisheries will be affected, nor which activities will be prohibited.โ€

BOSTON โ€” Fishing groups from around New England met with Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on Friday to air complaints about former President Barack Obamaโ€™s designation of the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument last year.

The monument, the first marine national monument in U.S. Atlantic waters, protects about 4,000 square miles of ocean 150 miles southeast of Cape Cod.

Fishermen say the protected area in which fishing is prohibited hurts their business and places an undue burden on an already heavily regulated industry. But scientists say the area, which is home to hundreds of species of marine life and fragile coral, is an important natural resource that must be protected.

In his proclamation creating the marine monument, Obama prohibited fossil fuel or mineral exploration, all commercial fishing, and other activities that could disturb the sea floor. Scientific research is allowed with a permit. Commercial red crab and lobster fishermen have to phase out their operations within the monument area over the next seven years.

During their meeting with Zinke at Legal Sea Foods on Boston Harbor, fishermen and industry representatives asked the secretary to consider dissolving the monument or changing the regulations within its boundaries and complained about the way it was originally designated.

โ€œAs an American, this brought me to tears at my desk,โ€ said Beth Casoni, executive director of the Massachusetts Lobstermenโ€™s Association. โ€œNo one should have the power to sign people out of work.โ€

Some commercial fishermen said they felt the former administration did not take their concerns into account before designating the monument.

โ€œEven though we were allowed minimal โ€” and thatโ€™s an understatement โ€” input, we received mostly lip service,โ€ said Eric Reid, general manager of Seafreeze Shoreside in Narragansett, Rhode Island. โ€œSmall businesses like me that need stability to grow their business and invest in America are at risk. We can make America and commercial fishing great again.โ€

But Priscilla Brooks, vice president and director of ocean conservation at the Conservation Law Foundation, said the former administration did take fishermenโ€™s concerns into account. Obama reduced the size of the original proposed monument by 60 percent and allowed lobster and crab fishermen a seven-year grace period to continue fishing there.

โ€œThere was a robust public process,โ€ she said.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

SQUID FISHING IS A BOON TO THE LOCAL ECONOMY

May 31, 2017 โ€” Itโ€™s high squid fishing season. Recreational anglers crowd the Calamari (Goat Island) Causeway at night, carrying floating water lights and special jigs to scoop them up in buckets. The commercial fleet is pumping squid into the Port of Galilee by the boatload. From the seabed to the boat to a saltwater flume that shoots them into the maw of a dockside processing facility, they are sorted, graded and flash frozen at minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit.

In late March, Ryan Clark, president and CEO of the Town Dock, took advantage of a quiet pre-season moment to demonstrate how the Loligo pealei, or longfin squid, is hand-gutted and cleaned. He deftly slices the tentacles from the body just above the eye and pulls out the beak. The guts and the backbone โ€” called the quill for its resemblance to a molted flight feather โ€” are extracted from the long tube of its body. Clark works his thumb between the skin and flesh to peel off the skin, then strips off the back fins to produce a white tube.

A squidโ€™s body is soft and offers little resistance to disassembly. At full throttle, workers at the Town Dockโ€™s Johnston facility hand-process 500 squid an hour to send on their way to Spain, China or your favorite local seafood joint.

โ€œItโ€™s not typical manufacturing,โ€ says Clark. โ€œThe seafood world is very challenging with the unpredictable nature of fisheries. There are so many dynamics going on in the ocean. The science tries to keep up, but no one knows whatโ€™s underneath the waves. My team has to gear up. When squid season is upon us, itโ€™s all hands on deck to keep the boats going to maximize the catch.โ€

The Rhode Island fleet has been so adept at maximizing this particular catch that Galilee is now the number one port for longfin squid landings on the East Coast. In 2015, for example, Rhode Island landed sixteen million pounds. New York, its nearest competitor, landed about 4.3 million pounds.

Last year was Rhode Islandโ€™s best yet, with 119 vessels landing 22.6 million pounds of squid, valued at $28.6 million. Once an underutilized species, squid is the linchpin of the port. With three processors โ€” the others are Sea Fresh USA and Seafreeze โ€” Galilee also attracts out-of-state vessels, magnifying the economic impact, says Department of Environmental Management (DEM) port manager Daniel Costa.

โ€œSquid is not a state-restricted fin fish. Other vessels come here because of our processing and they are the ones buying the fuel, the ice, the groceries,โ€ he says. โ€œThey are getting their vessels repaired here and mending their nets. They are spending a lot of money and that is where we get the boost.โ€

Rodman Sykes, a commercial fisherman for forty-seven years, recalls the days when Rhode Island-caught squid never hit the shore.

Read the full story at Rhode Island Monthly

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