Ocean Resource Privatization
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The New England groundfish debacle (Part III): who or what is at fault? Nils E. Stolpe/FishNet
NILS STOLPE: The New England groundfish debacle (Part IV): Is cutting back harvest really the answer?
While it’s a fact that’s hardly ever acknowledged, the assumption in fisheries management is that if the population of a stock of fish isn’t at some arbitrary level, it’s because of too much fishing. Hence the term “overfished.” Hence the mandated knee jerk reaction of the fisheries managers to not enough fish; cut back on fishing. What of other factors? They don’t count. It’s all about fishing, because fishing is all that the managers can control; it’s their Maslow’s Hammer. When it comes to the oceans it seems as if it’s about all that the industry connected mega-foundations that support the anti-fishing ENGOs with hundreds of millions of dollars a year in “donations” are interested in controlling. Read the article here
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Recent Posts
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Opinion: Halibut plan is best yet: Catch sharing manages uncertainty, conserves stock
Heath Hilyard, the executive director of the Southeast Alaska Guides Organization, is right (Aug. 9, News-Miner). The halibut catch sharing plan, or CSP, isn’t about conservation. Read More » -
Mexican national charged with murder, attempted murder in deadly hammer, knife attack on fishing boat off Nantucket
A Mexican national is facing charges after a fisherman on a Virginia-based fishing vessel died during an altercation about 55 miles off the coast of Nantucket Read More » -
F/V Aleutian Isle lying on starboard side 200 feet down, TFR extended to Oct. 15
An ROV was deployed early Tuesday morning August 30 to the F/V Aleutian Isle wreck site. The ROV and subsequent dive operations confirmed the commercial fishing Read More » -
Governor Dunleavy has a gag order on AK fish budgets, bills
Alaska’s new slogan is “open for business” but good luck trying to find out any budget details when it comes to the business of fishing. The Read More » -
Turtle Excluder Devices: Public meeting on shrimping regulation gets little feedback
A new federal regulation on Coast shrimpers may add more stress on an already stressed industry. Wednesday’s meeting discussed expanding the use of Turtle Excluder Devices Read More » -
North Atlantic right whale calf found dead off Massachusetts coast
The female calf was found Monday near Edgartown, a town on Martha’s Vineyard. The cause of death is unknown. Kim Elmslie, the campaign director for ocean Read More » -
How a rubber boot transformed shrimp processing
“I got my original idea, believe it or not, in church,” Lapeyre said in a 1982 television interview. “When I was supposed to be praying, I was Read More » -
N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries to close some waters to gill nets
The N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries announces that at one hour before sunset today (Wednesday), large mesh gill nets will be prohibited from certain internal state Read More » -
Bodega Bay Fisherman’s Festival celebrates, blesses a busy fleet
More than 20 vessels on Sunday were blessed by local clergy as part of the Bodega Bay Fisherman’s Festival, continuing a more than 50-year tradition in Read More » -
‘Freaked out’: Big money industry crippling salmon population in Alaska, natives say
There is no more salmon. That’s what native Alaskan Ricko DeWilde is most concerned with these days. Once flowing with abundance, native tribes have been sounding Read More » -
Editorial: NOAA leadership grades spotlight agency’s low credibility
The word that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s strategic management has drawn scathing reviews in a new survey assessing federal worker satisfaction should come as Read More » -
6 to 9 p.m. tonight in Gloucester at GARFO headquarters, Forum focuses on whale protection rules
The eight-community traveling road show to gather public comment on new protections for the imperiled North Atlantic right whales hits the city Tuesday evening and is Read More » -
Maryland to restrict crabbing, including first-ever limits on harvest of male blue crab
Regulations issued this week, to be in effect from July through December, will limit commercial watermen to at most 15 bushels a day of male crabs Read More » -
A boat takes shape
Though the date of the photo is still unknown, Crescent City resident Richard Evanow says he saw the boat take shape. Featured in a Sept. 25 Read More » -
BP is ordered to pay $130 million — and more — to run oil spill claims center
The ruling comes as BP tries to temporarily block claims payments while former FBI Director Louis Freeh investigates allegations of misconduct by an attorney who worked Read More » -
Sustainable lobster fishery takes time, Atlantic Canada has sought status for three years
The regional lobster fishery is moving toward sustainable certification, but it is taking time, says the Lobster Council of Canada’s executive director. “It’s complex,” Geoff Irvine Read More » -
Athearn Marine Agency Boat of the Week: 48ft Crabber – Gillnetter, 230HP Detroit Diesel
Specifications, information and 22 photo’s click here To see all the boats in this series, Click here 15:00 Read More » -
Hello Ms. Schiffer, Chief Counsel, NMFS – About that Document Shredding
Once again, I find it difficult to understand, as indicated by the attached article, how a poor working stiff fisherman is hauled all the way to the Read More » -
Search resumes for missing F/V Chief William Saulis fishermen in Bay of Fundy
Police say the search for five missing fishermen from the Chief William Saulis fishing vessel in the Bay of Fundy will resume from the air on Read More » -
Wicked Tuna Fisherman Tyler McLaughlin Receives Prestigious First Responder Award
New Hampshire fisherman Captain Tyler McLaughlin was named as a 2015 Hero by the Red Cross of Northwest Massachusetts for his heroic efforts rescuing a sinking Read More » -
Chesapeake Bay blue crabs in trouble, tighter harvest restrictions loom
With the Chesapeake Bay’s crab population at its lowest ebb in more than 30 years, Maryland and Virginia are moving to curtail harvests in one of Read More » -
X15-Powered Lobster Boats on the Water, the first commercial fishing application of this engine.
When Steve Corkum Jr. of Yarmouth Sea Products couldn’t find a yard prepared to build 15 lobster boats in a single order, he started his own Read More » -
‘People helping people’
Some folks in Alaska are going to be very thankful on Thanksgiving. The Lydia Marie, a 44-foot wooden troller, with its captain, Logan Padgett, and his Read More » -
‘You’ve got to listen to fishermen,’ Dwight Ball hears while promoting shrimp processing
Liberal leader Dwight Ball highlighted the fishery on the campaign trail today. A recent deal with offshore companies is bringing more shrimp to onshore processing plants. Read More » -
Feds intend to appeal forfeiture deal in Codfather case
Federal prosecutors are not going quietly in their quest to exact far more assets from convicted fishing mogul Carlos Rafael. The U.S. Attorney’s office on Wednesday Read More »
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No! You mean to tell me that it’s NOT OVERFISHING that’s somehow caused this? Would someone please tell the luminaries at NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center at Woods Hole, MA that there is evidence that factors such as estuarine degradation of fish rookeries exist and in fact are quite widespread and negatively impacting fish populations, and in fact have precious little to do with commercial fishing.
In the late 1960’s and early 1970’s the exact same conditions existed on LI. Phosphates from laundry detergents which got your clothes “whiter than white” leached into LI, NY’s Great South Bay and almost wiped out a thriving hard shell clam industry. Suffolk County banned phosphates (but Nassau Co. did not) however Suffolk’s ban completely reversed the algae that we called “grass wool” which blanketed the entire bottom choking off life and stealing oxygen—many many fish kills before it was stopped.
Now what’s so astounding to me is, thanks for a good article, but why is this News? The exact same thing happened 45 years ago on LI. Don’t scientists talk to each other—at all? Or are they too busy figuring out how to attribute pretty much any eco-negativity to the “sitting duck” commercial fishermen.
When reading comments on just about any article pertaining to the fishing industry, good or bad, the peanut gallery always chimes in, and the obligatory “over fishing” greedy fishermen, catch he last fish crowd makes sure they include it. What I like about this article, only a composite of the problem along every coastal community in the country is, I get to tell people about their complicity when it comes to destruction of the eco system in their everyday life.
They will rant and rave about draggers dragging, and so on, yet fail to look at themselves in the mirror as they hitch up their pants or adjust their skirts while pushing down the handle of their toilets, becoming part of the problem ten times per day, or when they wash their clothes.
I really enjoy pointing that out to people.
Looks like it’s time to apply a little NOAA Management here. What do you say about SECTORS and CRAP SHARES.
We should regulate this through Sector Time Shares. Each Home or McMansion will be allowed 10 Days in 2 Day increments spread throughout the SECTORS allowing the Toxins to disperse quicker. Also all Landscaping materials must be safe and organic.
Sign here Janie