Lobster fishermen face a monumental problem

The Newport-based fishing vessel Freedom has been Marc Ducharme’s home away from home since it was built in 1984. And for the better part of those 32 years, Ducharme, the boat’s captain, and his crews of four to five men have spent their time pulling lobster traps from the waters around three underwater canyons near the edge of the continental shelf, about 125 miles southeast of Nantucket. The crew makes 25-30 runs a year — each lasting about a week — to the lucrative lobster grounds formally referred to as the Northeast Canyons on George’s Bank. Each trip nets them about 6,000 pounds of lobster, Ducharme said Wednesday, standing in the cockpit of the 72-foot-long vessel docked at the Newport state fishing pier. Using executive authority established by the Antiquities Act of 1906, President Barrack Obama on Sept. 15 designated a 4,900-square- mile area the Northeast Canyons and Seamount Marine National Monument. That area includes the sea canyons, where Ducharme plies his trade. The designation will eventually prohibit all commercial fishing there. Read the story here 12:41

One Response to Lobster fishermen face a monumental problem

  1. Rocky Novello says:

    Obama & Congress , rather support Marine National Monuments ,that most people will never see ! Then hard working fishermen that are struggling to stay in business . This is another nail , in our coffin ? Our government , MAKES NO CENTS for the AMERICAN FISHING INDUSTRY
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