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RHODE ISLAND: Forum focuses on future of fishing industry

January 16, 2017 — More than 50 fishermen, educators and other community members attended the fifth workshop of Resilient Fisheries RI, dubbed “Fostering a New Generation of RI Fishermen,” at the Contemporary Theatre Company in Wakefield Monday.

Sarah Schumann, project coordinator for Resilient Fisheries RI, told the attendees that while the project began last year with a focus on environmental change and uncertainty, it grew to encompass other areas.

“Usually when people think about environmental change, they think about what the fish are doing … but it’s just as much about people, the fishermen,” she said.

Through roughly 50 interviews conducted in 2016, Schumann said she noticed a trend – the lack of young people in the fishing industry. She demonstrated this through a crowd participation exercise, which showed approximately half of the fishermen on hand were over 50, while only eight were under 40 and four were under 30.

In comments from fishermen, many spoke of the high cost of obtaining licenses and tough regulations, as well as generational gaps. One young lobsterman said the startup costs are often prohibitive for those beginning in the industry. Joe Raposa, a third-generation fisherman, instead asserted “a lot of the younger generation doesn’t know how to work or want to work.”

Josh Bird, who had worked in the corporate world for some time and came back to the fishing industry, spoke of the impact of technology on younger generations. He also said many students are not exposed to fishing and other similar career paths.

“I’ve got a 14-year-old son and it’s hard to have him outside, never mind being out on the water, he’s kind of glued to technology,” he said. “Schools, they don’t really encourage you to do that track. Even when I was in high school in the ’90s, the track was kind of like ‘Oh, well we don’t have any shop classes, we don’t have anything like that.’ It’s almost like a fear mongering thing, where if you don’t jump on board with that stuff now you’re going to get left behind.”

Another issue highlighted was Rhode Island’s licensing rules. John Kourtesis told the crowd he would be training his son to fish.

“If he wanted to buy a boat, he could go to Massachusetts, jump on it, and be the owner and the captain and start his own business,” Kourtesis said. “But in Rhode Island, you can go buy a boat and bring it back to Newport or Point Judith, and you can’t land anything because they license the person in this state, not the boat.

Read the full story at The Independent 

Dedicated Man Helps Endangered Herring Complete Spawning Run

April 12, 2016 — When Bill McWha moved to Wakefield, RI, he expected to deliver packages for UPS. Instead, he found himself transporting tens of thousands of river herring en route to their spawning grounds on the Saugatucket River. According to National Geographic, McWha first visited the river in 2010 and saw thousands of river herring unable to pass the Main Street Dam. So, armed with only a net, he perched himself on a 14-foot board and scooped 10 to 15 fish at a time, then placed them back into the river above the dam.

Though many simply shook their heads, some curious passersby stopped to help. McWha and a dozen volunteers helped about 20,000 fish over the dam during the next three weeks. Since then, helping the herring on their spawning run has become an annual event in Wakefield. Every March and April, growing numbers of volunteers join McWha as he mounts a wooden platform and nets the fish.

McWha says that he felt terrible about the herring’s plight and knew that he had to help. To him, it was “a waste that these herring weren’t going to be able to spawn.”  McWha told National Geographic that he “felt an emotional connection to them, and just had to get them over the dam.”

McWha’s efforts expanded upstream in 2013, when volunteers used buckets to move fish beyond a second dam. In 2014, 75 volunteers, armed with only nets, helped an astonishing 72,000 fish navigate the Main Street Dam. Over the past year or so, however, efforts have slowed down as officials work on existing fish ladders, improving the run. McWha and his band of volunteers will be standing by to count fish and, if necessary, break out the nets and help fish over the dam.

See the full story at Field & Stream

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