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MONIQUE COOMBS: Why We Should Insist on U.S.-Caught Seafood

May 27, 2020 — You know Dave Marciano from National Geographic’s Wicked Tuna. (And I’ve written about him before): To most of us in New England, he’s just a decent guy who goes tuna fishing and happens to be on TV.

TV is just a thing that happened for him, and he sees it as an opportunity to both help his business and do what he can to promote the importance of commercial fishing, American fishermen, and delicious seafood in the U.S.

Marciano is worried about the future of his business, regardless of the TV show. He depends on people visiting and traveling to Gloucester for his charter boat business. “I was a smoker for 40 years so that probably puts me in the high-risk category,” he says. And, despite being outside, being on a fishing vessel is pretty close quarters.

Many of us who work in the fishing industry are worried about a couple of months from now when the fishing season picks up, the weather warms, and visitors flock to the coast. Are the restaurants going to be able to open? Are people going to want to travel? Will people be spending money? Restaurants and tourism are outlets for products like Maine lobster and other seafood in the U.S. What is going to happen when all of the fishermen need to get back to work but there’s no place for the product to go and no mechanism to get it to where it needs to be?

Read the full opinion piece at Heated

MASSACHUSETTS: GOP hopeful Geoff Diehl forms fishing advisory council

August 31, 2018 — Geoff Diehl, who’s running in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate, announced Thursday morning the formation of his “Fishing Advisory Council.”

Diehl made the announcement on the city’s working waterfront at Bergie’s Seafood.

“Understanding the importance of fishing to our economy, I have been meeting with leaders of the industry for well over a year. It is clear that fishermen need and deserve a full-time senator who will work to revive and protect the industry,” Diehl said in a statement. “That’s why today I am pleased to announce my Fishing Advisory Council. They will be advising me on fishing and related matters that effect our local ports.”

Members include:

    • Bill Mantville, Leading Seafoods, Boston
    • John Haran, Sector 13, New Bedford
    • John Reardon, Sector 9, New Bedford
    • Mark Bergeron, Bergie’s Seafoods, New Bedford
    • Mike Orlando, Intershell International, Gloucester
    • Rob Rizzo, Eastern Fisheries, New Bedford
    • Patrick Hughes, Harbor Blue Fisheries, Fairhaven
    • Captain Dave Marciano, FV Hard Merchandise, Gloucester
    • Chris Basile, Quaterdeck Seafood, Maynard

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

MASSACHUSETTS: ‘Wicked Tuna’ captain, charter owner to treat warriors to a day fishing

June 28, 2018 — On Wednesday, as the U.S. celebrates the 242nd birthday of its Declaration of Independence, fisherman Capt. Dave Marciano of “Wicked Tuna” and Tom Orrell of Gloucester-based Yankee Fleet, are going for the hat trick.

For the third consecutive Independence Day, the two men who first met when a much younger Marciano worked for Yankee Fleet, are teaming up to provide a boat full of veterans — some of them still carrying the wounds of their service — with a free day of fishing on one of Gloucester’s iconic charter boats, the aptly named Yankee Freedom.

“We’re going again,” Orrell said Wednesday. “Same as last year.”

The fishing trip for veterans and their guests has become one of the city’s staples among July Fourth celebrations.

The lineup is a familiar one. There are parades, bonfires and fireworks. There are barbecues, ball games and trips to the beach.

And now there is the Yankee Freedom, which accommodates about 70 anglers, heading out from the Head of the Harbor on the morning of the Fourth for the recreational fishing grounds of the Atlantic.

The event has become almost as wildly popular as the “Wicked Tuna” fishing reality show that has made Marciano a celebrity, if not a star.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

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