Offshore Wind Farms: As turbines rise, small-scale fishermen have the most to lose

David Aripotch is 65, a weathered man with gray hair, just tall enough to see over the helm. He has been fishing for almost a half-century, but he still gets excited every time the net is lifted from the ocean. It’s all the other things that eat at him. The federal fishing quotas that sometimes make him steam as far south as North Carolina to catch fish he can find off Long Island. The mind-boggling expenses of running a fishing boat: $5,000 a month for insurance, $30,000 for a new net, $60,000 for a paint job. Worst of all are the wind farms. “There’s so many things going against you as a commercial fisherman in the United States,” he said. “And now these wind farms, it’s almost like that’s the final nail in the coffin.” >click to read< (2nd article of 2 parts, >part 1<) 09:20

One Response to Offshore Wind Farms: As turbines rise, small-scale fishermen have the most to lose

  1. STRIPEDBASSHOLE says:

    Nice Article Dave… I just have one question ??? When did CRAFTSMAN AND MORSE get together and make a Control UNIT??? For some reason “Bing” makes for better viewing your picture expands clear!!!
    Regards
    –SBH–

    P.S. Where’s the Factory Downeast???

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.