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Home arrow News arrow State and Local arrow Gloucester fishermen warn NOAA head of dire future
Gloucester fishermen warn NOAA head of dire future
Fisherman Al Cottone gestured to his fishing boat, tucked in a cold corner of Gloucester harbor today, and told the nation’s fisheries chief he might not be in business much longer.
 

A decade ago, Cottone downsized to the small, 45-foot dragger after his fishing partner, his father, retired. He planned to upgrade, he told National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration head Jane Lubchenco. But ever-tighter rules left him without the catch and cash to get it done.

Now, a May 1 switch to a new management system has him on the brink of shutting down, he said.

"We’re in panic mode," Cottone, 44, told Lubchenco. "I mean, I don’t know if you realize that we’re in panic mode."

"I heard that loud and clear," Lubchenco responded.

Read the complete story at The Boston Herald.

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