|
Catch down, revenues up for Northeast fishermen |
|
By JAY LINDSAY Associated Press Writer BOSTON - August 13, 2010 - The catch for fishermen in the Northeast during the first three months following drastic rule changes fell 10 percent compared to last year but revenues rose 17 percent, according to federal statistics released this week.
Kurkul said one concern was recorded landings for species that aren't supposed to be caught at all, including southern New England winter flounder, which showed 36 metric tons for the quarter. Kurkul said the number could be the result of wrongdoing, faulty reporting by dealers or compiled from statistics gathered by third-party federal catch observers.
Though the total catch was relatively even, fishing varied among ports. In Gloucester, the catch dropped about 13 percent in the first quarter, but New Bedford groundfishermen increased their catch by 10 percent. Portland, Maine, saw a huge jump, with 61 percent more groundfish landings in the first quarter, compared to last year. But Kurkul said Portland may just be absorbing the catch from the state's other ports, whose combined catch dropped 50 percent during the same period. The haul in Rhode Island was 15 percent higher than last year, but it dropped 43 percent in New Hampshire, an area where fisherman have been staying tied up, Kurkul said. Read the Associated Press story in the Mercury News |
|||
|
|
|
||
33 Fishing Community Members Say Permit Bank, Giacalone are pluses for Gloucester
This permit bank is a true local treasure for our fishing community and related businesses. Its existence has been one of the only positive things to come to this fishing community in decades.






News 