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Lobster Fishing Ban KILLED: East Coast Fishermen Fought Proposed Moratorium (PHOTOS)

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 07/22/10 06:06 PM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 06:10 PM ET

UPDATE, 7/22, 5:09pm EST: LOBSTERING BAN KILLED:

The Associated Press reports:

A proposal to ban lobster fishing over a vast stretch of the East Coast has been killed after lobstermen said it would do "almost biblical" damage to the industry.


The board that advises the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission on lobster rules voted Thursday to consider lesser reductions in the catch - or no new restrictions at all.

The vote came after lobstermen said a ban on lobster fishing from south of Cape Cod to North Carolina would destroy their businesses. They also said they're seeing signs that the species is rebounding.

A scientific committee recommended a five-year moratorium to the board, citing the species' dire condition. Long Island lobsterman John German said he was relieved the moratorium was killed. But he said the industry can't survive any new cuts.


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Lobsterman Nick Crismale of Guilford, Conn., top, talks with board member Lance Stewart during break of a meeting of the American Lobster Management Board in Warwick, R.I., Thursday, July 22, 2010. The board is considering a five-year moratorium on lobster fishing south of Cape Cod to North Carolina to deal with a lobster population crash. Crismale, a member of the Connecticut Lobsterman's Association, said a moratorim was "almost biblical" in terms of the damage it would do the industry. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
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Previously:

Associated Press: WARWICK, R.I.--A proposal to ban lobster fishing over a vast stretch of the East Coast would do "almost biblical" damage to the industry just as the species seems to be rebounding, lobstermen said Thursday.

Dozens of lobstermen traveled to Warwick for a meeting of the board that advises the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission on lobster rules.

The board is considering ways to help a species that's been struggling since a population crash a decade ago, including a possible five-year moratorium on lobstering from south of Cape Cod to North Carolina. A decision is expected by late this year.

Lobstermen told the American Lobster Management Board that the species was in far better shape than scientists say and argued it should give less severe conservation measures time to work.

"This is almost biblical what you're proposing here," said Nick Crismale of the Connecticut Lobsterman's Association. "It impacts numerous lives."

Bart Mansi recalled a mysterious lobster die-off in Long Island Sound in 1999 as "a disaster."

"What we have now, there is no disaster," said Mansi, of Guilford, Conn. "The board is making a disaster."

The moratorium was recommended by the board's technical committee in May. The commission will consider other options -- including no change to the current rules, which include measures that protect smaller lobsters and reproductive females -- before making a final decision, expected by the end of the year.

On Thursday, the board discussed commissioning a peer review of the science behind the recommended ban, though some said a ban shouldn't even be considered because it would kill the industry.

"The board needs to confront the reality of destroying the fishery to save the lobsters," said Bill McElroy, a Rhode Island lobsterman and board member. "It doesn't really do anybody any good."

Carl Wilson, head of the lobster board's technical committee, said in an interview during a break that his group was keenly aware of the impact a ban would have on the industry. The panel wouldn't have recommended it if the stock wasn't in such dire condition, he said.

During a presentation Thursday, Wilson said the moratorium aimed to give a generation of lobsters a chance to rebound. He added five years might not be long enough to allow that, which prompted grumbling in the room. One person yelled out, "Going to stick it to us, huh?"

The region under review is called the southern New England region, although it extends from south of the tip of Cape Cod all the way to North Carolina. It accounts for 5 to 7 percent of the Northeast's lobster catch; the rest is trapped north of Cape Cod to Maine. Roughly 2,000 to 3,000 full and part-time lobstermen work in the southern New England region, according to the commission.

The area once accounted for as much as a quarter of the Northeast's catch, and its lobster population peaked at about 35 million in the late 1990s. But the stock sank to around 13 million by 2003 and is estimated at about 15 million today, compared with around 116 million lobsters in the Gulf of Maine.

Scientists cannot explain the recent crash, but possible factors include overfishing, a 1996 Rhode Island oil spill and a disfiguring shell disease. In its May report, the technical committee said warmer water may be holding back stocks, since that drives lobsters to cooler, deeper waters -- away from prime spawning grounds and to places where more predators lurk.

Lobstermen suggested the downturn may be cyclical. They said they're seeing more and bigger lobsters, and urged the board to give more time to the current conservation measures.

"I don't know how we woke up thinking there was this picture of doom and gloom," said Joe Horvath of Belmont, N.J. "I've been fishing for 40 years. ... I don't see any crash of the fishery."

Albert Rosinha of Westport, Mass., said, "I'm seeing a totally different picture in my traps."

Wilson said in an interview that the stock assessment was conducted over three years using the most robust science available.

Fisherman aren't currently overfishing, but Wilson said trapping more lobsters from the already-stressed population would hurt the species.

The ban's potentially profound affects on lobstermen must be taken into account by regulators before anything is done, Wilson said. But he said his committee's job was to figure out what was best for the lobsters so the industry has a sustainable future.

"I don't think the fishermen want biologists to become sociologists, or anthropologists or economists," he said. "Our job is to protect the resource."

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UPDATE, 7/22, 5:09pm EST: LOBSTERING BAN KILLED: The Associated Press reports: A proposal to ban lobster fishing over a vast stretch of the East Coast has been killed after lobstermen said it would ...
UPDATE, 7/22, 5:09pm EST: LOBSTERING BAN KILLED: The Associated Press reports: A proposal to ban lobster fishing over a vast stretch of the East Coast has been killed after lobstermen said it would ...
 
 
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05:20 PM on 08/03/2010
Perpetual Mantra of Fishery:
One fish, two fish, red white and blue fish ...uh oh, no more fish!
Next species....one fish, two fish......
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01:46 PM on 07/29/2010
They need to tear a page out of Maine's book.

While that state has a distinct advantage due to the geography and water temperatures of its coast, the Lobstermen there have worked WITH the state and federal fisheries management people and have made the harvest there quite sustainable. Populations are constantly monitored, fishermen are very conscientious about what they take and throw back, liscences are carefully issued, and hatcheries along the coast work to introduce new stock all year long. It's one of the only catches in the US, except maybe pacific salmon, that hasn't imploded over the last 30 years
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exile
08:19 PM on 07/26/2010
so we be trappin them lobesters til we can't find them
what you think of my business plan huh.
06:45 PM on 07/26/2010
I don't want to see anyone lose their livelihood or for that matter their way of life. But things do change. That is the one constant in life. Any industry that harvests natural resources must to be very sensitive to the fact that even a renewable resource needs time to come back. And if they have harvested that resource to the point that it's ability to reproduce itself is very week... well then you get regulated. Total collapse of the lobster population would put them out of business permanently and would be a disaster that reaches way beyond just their pocket books.
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Ayla87
Don't Delete Me Bro!
02:08 PM on 07/26/2010
"Crismale, a member of the Connecticut Lobsterman's Association, said a moratorim was "almost biblical" in terms of the damage it would do the industry."

I wonder what word Crismale would use to describe a total population crash of the new england lobster stock. Because that's exactly what's about to happen. Either way he'll be out of a job.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ourstorian
Free your mind and your ass will follow!
09:20 AM on 07/26/2010
The lobstermen are whistling past their own graveyard if they can't see the dire necessity of conservation to allow the lobster stocks to replenish themselves.
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Gavin
Ecologist
11:59 PM on 07/25/2010
Nobody wants to see watermen of any kind kept from earning a living. I just hope they don't lobster themselves right out of a job by causing the fishery to collapse.
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Ozark Homesteader
http://ozarkhomesteader.wordpress.com
09:23 AM on 07/24/2010
The US needs to come up with an alternative for lobstermen and women in the ban zone. If you offer no alternative and basically say, "You can't earn a living anymore" with no alternative, of course you'll get opposition. Could the company responsible for the 1996 oil spill pay part of their lost income?

The opposition from fishermen and women remind me of the opposition from teamsters to improved rail systems and shifts away from big trucks on interstates. Using railroads make so much more sense financially for corporations, consumers, and government, but of course teamsters will block this change unless you can offer them an alternative to losing their livelihood.
04:00 PM on 07/23/2010
These fisherman despise regulation, but it is those very regulation that keep them in business. I seem to recall a big to do when quotas were placed on crab fishing in the Berrin Sea. Everyone would say disaster was imminent and yet the industry seems to be as healthy as ever with a reality TV to boot.
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01:16 PM on 07/23/2010
Theres a smarter way..use the NZ method of saftey zones.Block out sections its that easy.
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Geauterre
Writer, Author, Commentator and Humorist.
08:50 AM on 07/23/2010
There is a point to banning lobster fishing for five years. Having lived in areas of the country where overindulging caused strains on the ecosystem, I am a witness to the havoc raised by greed. Take for instance New England Clam Chowder. Ever wonder why there are no 'clams' in the clam chowder? It doesn't take a genius to figure out that what you cooked on your stove was more label than contents. And why was that? Greed. Greed, greed, greed, greed, greed. I am shaking my head when I say that.
05:00 AM on 07/23/2010
Fishermen have already destroyed species of fish that used to be very abundant. Tilapia is now a common restaurant fish, it used to be considered a flavorless trash fish. I'm not blaming locals so much as the giant corporate ships with several-mile long nets which take everything. But do financially strapped lobster farmers have the right to destroy lobster fisheries because they don't know how to do anything else? US bailout corporate welfare queens are sitting on two trillion dollars! That will re-train a lot of lobster guys. But if they are allowed to continue, there will be no lobsters at all, and no one will feel sorry for them.
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clearthinker2008
we need to respect each other
07:10 AM on 07/23/2010
US bailout corporate welfare KINGS, they are mostly men.
04:53 AM on 07/23/2010
Sure, fishermen trying to squeeze every dollar out of lobsters know more than objective scientists. Just like Gulf Coast fishermen knew more about offshore drilling and its relation to fishing. Unregulated free markets, in a time of fast population growth and increasing demand, is pretry much destroying everything.
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VanTroi
03:18 AM on 07/23/2010
It hurts to be boiled
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01:47 PM on 07/29/2010
If you you have a complex central nervous system, yes, it does.
10:39 PM on 07/22/2010
Do any of you folks realize that when this was a young country there were so many lobsters that it was considered food for common people?
When in this country did it become policy to go unpunished for screwing things up? The fishermen have sown seeds of destruction and now they are bitching that they shouldn't have to reap the very fate that they've dealt themselves.
Granted, some lobsterfolk are very conscientious and it's a crying shame that they have to suffer for the idiocy of their peers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VanTroi
03:16 AM on 07/23/2010
It was fed to prisoners and considered almost a punishment come on it's a bug
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clearthinker2008
we need to respect each other
07:20 AM on 07/23/2010
A lobster is an arthropod, a classification of animals that includes insects.
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clearthinker2008
we need to respect each other
07:12 AM on 07/23/2010
Yes, I did know that. I also know that sometimes fisherman employees refused to eat it because that was all that was served and they felt like they were being treated badly because of it.