Seaspiracy: A Seafood Response - Panel and Q&A

Seaspiracy: A Seafood Response

Join Maine Coast Fishermen’s Association for a Zoom panel discussion on the controversial new film Seaspiracy.

Join our panel of seafood experts this FRIDAY, April 9 at 3PM EST/11AM AKST as they discuss the Netflix documentary Seaspiracy and answer your questions about seafood. 

REGISTER

Seaspiracy (Trailer) is a 2021 Netflix original documentary about the environmental impact of fishing directed by and starring Ali Tabrizi, a British filmmaker.

 The documentary about the environmental impact of commercial fishing on the has attracted celebrity endorsements and plaudits from fans. However, fishermen, nonprofits, sustainability labels, and experts have accused the film-makers of making “misleading claims”, using out-of-context interviews, and erroneous statistics.

 Seaspiracy not just questions the idea of sustainable fishing, but suggests it's a myth and conspiracy. 

 Not surprisingly, we disagree! To put some context to the film and to share what it got right, wrong, and really, really, really wrong, MCFA has convened a panel of experts to share their thoughts on the film and answer your questions about the documentary. 

 

When:

Friday, April 9, @ 3PM EST

Where:

On Zoom

 REGISTER HERE

Our expert panel includes:

Barton Seaver: Author, chef, and one of the world’s leading sustainable seafood experts and educators

Jessica Hathaway: Editor in Chief at National Fisherman magazine.

Linda Behnken: Executive Director of Alaska Longline Fishermen's Association and 2016 White House Champion of Change for Sustainable Seafood.

Michael Conathan: Ocean Policy Advisor at the Aspen Institute

Ben Martens: Executive Director of the Maine Coast Fishermen's Association.

Space is limited so please register in advance

REGISTER

AMSEA Mariner’s First Aid & CPR Class in Sitka

The Alaska Marine Safety Education Association (AMSEA) will offer a Mariner's First Aid & CPR/AED class in Sitka, Alaska on April 17, 2021, 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM at N.S.R.A.A., 1308 Sawmill Creek Road. The cost for the class is $125.00, including sales tax. Interested mariners may register online at www.amsea.org or call (907) 747-3287.


Instructor Rob Emley will cover CPR & automatic external defibrillators (AED); treatment of choking; medical emergencies; trauma; environmental hazards; patient assessment; medical communications; drowning & hypothermia; and common fishing injuries. Attendees will receive a U.S. Coast Guard accepted, two-year certificate issued by the American Safety & Health Institute. Participants must wear a cloth face mask and comply with other class procedures for reducing the risk of transmission of COVID-19.

Alaskans work together to bring Alaska salmon to Native Elders and community members impacted by COVID-19

Press Release

Alaskans work together to bring Alaska salmon to Native Elders and community members impacted by COVID-19

Sitka, AK - This Thursday and Friday, several Alaska organizations are helping deliver 12,000 pounds of donated Bristol Bay sockeye salmon to more than 400 Alaska Native Elders and families in the Anchorage area who were unable to harvest salmon during the 2020 fishing season due to COVID-19. The salmon distribution, being referred to as “Operation Fish Drop,” will provide 25-pound cases of frozen sockeye salmon fillets to eligible families who signed up in advance.

 “The coronavirus pandemic created barriers that prevented Alaska Native communities from accessing their subsistence foods, including salmon. As aid was flooding in from CARES Act programs, it was clear that the act’s scope was huge but it was not reaching many of our Alaska Native communities in ways that we needed help. Operation Fish Drop was created as a direct response to Alaska Native needs. It is critical to connect our Native people with the foods that sustain our health and heritage,” said Sam Schimmel, founder and organizer of Operation Fish Drop. 

 “In just a few hours after posting Operation Fish Drop online, descendants from all 13 Alaska Native Regional Corporations who represent the 231 federally recognized Native Tribes and Villages of Alaska had signed up to receive 12,000 pounds of frozen sockeye filets. There was so much demand that we had to create a waiting list that now has over 500 Alaska Native families and individuals on it. It is clear that we need more programs like this that address our food security needs — we need regional solutions to our regional problems. We are working with partners and searching for additional funders to help us bring more Alaska salmon to more Alaska Native families,” said Schimmel.

 Operation Fish Drop’s partners include Cook Inlet Tribal Council and the Alaska Native Heritage Center, which provided outreach and distribution support. The donated salmon was made possible by a fishermen-led Seafood Donation Program created in 2020 in response to COVID-19’s impacts on Alaska families. The program, housed at the Alaska Sustainable Fisheries Trust, is funded in part by seafood sales from Alaskans Own, a Sitka-based Community Supported Fishery that sells monthly seafood shares and seafood boxes directly to consumers in Alaska and the Lower 48. The program is also funded through the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association and grants from Catch Together, Multiplier, Alaska Community Foundation, Sitka Legacy Fund, and First Bank. To date, the program has distributed more than 600,000 meals of Alaska seafood to families in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest.

 “Alaska’s fishermen are in the business of feeding people; that’s what makes them excited to go out on the water season after season. While the coronavirus has brought a lot of challenges to our fishermen and industry, it’s also created a real opportunity for us to work with others and find new ways to make Alaska seafood more accessible to more Alaskans. We’re really honored and grateful that we can help local leaders like Sam bring wild salmon to the people who depend on it most, and we hope that we can bring more Operation Fish Drops to more communities around the state,” said Natalie Sattler, Alaskans Own Coordinator. 

 To learn more about the Seafood Donation Program, visit www.thealaskatrust.org. To sign up for Operation Fish Drop’s waitlist go to www.tinyurl.com/fish-drop.

 ###

 Members of the media are welcome to attend and interview organizers and participants of Operation Fish Drop 12pm - 2pm Thursday March 25th and Friday March 26th. Please reach out to the contacts below to confirm timing and coverage. 

 WHERE - Alaska Native Heritage Center (8800 Heritage Center Drive, Anchorage)

WHEN - 12pm - 2pm, Thursday March 25th and Friday March 26th

Media Contacts:

Natalie Sattler - Alaskans Own, info@alaskansown.com, 907-738-1286

Sam Schimmel - samueluschimmel@gmail.com, 907-690-2263

Ocean protection needs a spirit of compromise

Editorial in Nature

March 17th, 2021

A proposal that weighs up options for meeting climate, conservation and food-provision goals deserves serious consideration.

After a year of pandemic-induced delays, 2021 is set to be a big year for biodiversity, climate and the ocean. Later this year, world leaders are expected to gather for meetings of the United Nations conventions on biological diversity and climate to set future agendas. Ocean policies will be a priority for both.

Momentum is building for what is called the 30 × 30 campaign — a goal to protect 30% of the planet (both land and sea) by 2030. Last December, the 30% ocean goal was backed by the High Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean Economy, which comprises the heads of state of 14 coastal nations, including some of the largest countries, such as Indonesia, and the smallest, like Palau. This is an important step.

Nature 591, 346 (2021)

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-021-00673-0

Alaska and Washington CARES Act Federal Fisheries Disaster Relief Application Period Opens

Congress authorized a $300 million federal fisheries disaster relief package through the 2020 CARES Act.  Eligible fisheries participants include commercial and charter fishing sectors, aquaculture businesses, tribes and processing/seafood sectors.  Washington and Alaska each received $50 million and authorized direct payments to eligible fisheries participants.  The Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSMFC) will review applications and distribute funds. 

Applications are now available for Washington’s and Alaska’s fisheries disaster relief allocations.  Washington residents who fish in Alaska must apply for relief under the Washington spend plan.  The 45-day application period for Washington residents will end on March 25, 2021.  Applications for funds distributed from Alaska’s allocation will be available on the PSMFC website on March 1, 2021.  A 54-day application period will end April 23, 2021.  Alaska expects that the PSFMC will disburse funds in June 2021 after an application review period.

Alaska’s spend plan excludes Alaska fishermen who are residents of a coastal fishing state that received CARES Act federal fisheries disaster relief.  Residents of Idaho, Arizona or Michigan who otherwise meet eligibility requirements for the commercial fishing sector may apply for a share of Alaska’s allocation. Residents of Washington, Oregon or Massachusetts must apply in their home state.

In general, eligible commercial fishermen in Washington and Alaska must hold qualifying state or federal fishing, or vessel license permits, be active operators and have experienced a greater than 35% loss in gross fishery revenue during a specified period of time in 2020 as a direct or indirect result of COVID-19 relative to average gross fishing revenue the past five years (2015-2019).  Each state’s spend plan provides different ways for applicants who did not fish all five years to calculate losses.  ALFA’s website provides additional information regarding other criteria, applicable time periods, document and record retention requirements. 

Payment amounts for the Alaska allocation are unknown until all applications are received and the total number of shares counted. Each sector will have its allocation divided by the total number of shares which will then become the base share value.  For Alaska’s $17.3 commercial harvester allocation, there will be one share per eligible permit or license. There are 10,520 Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) permits, 732 CFEC vessel permits and 5,301 federal permits.  If all 16,552 permits and vessel licenses were eligible, the base share would be $1,043.  For example, an applicant who owned a vessel, a salmon permit and halibut IFQ would receive $3,129. There are 5,790 potentially eligible charter sector shares, with a base value of $2,301 per share and 1,150 potentially eligible processor shares with a base value of $13,729.  ADF&G divided processors into seven revenue tiers, with lower earners ($30,000 - $75,000) receiving one share and the largest processors (>$50 million) receiving 7 shares.

Washington’s approved spend plan also authorizes direct payments to fishery participants.   There is one pool for the $38.5 million allocated to non-tribal commercial fishing, shellfish aquaculture, seafood processing and charter industry participants.  Washington anticipates claims from fishery and seafood related businesses that range from small sole proprietorships to large corporations.  Because of this variability, direct payment amounts are uncertain.  Washington expects claimed losses to exceed funds and provides mechanisms that proportionally reduce payments to ensure distribution across the range of eligible applicants.  In the event of a surplus, a second application period will open.

 Washington’s plan sets a qualifying period for losses between January 1 and July 31, 2020, whether for the full seven months or any partial consecutive period of four weeks or more.  Applicants must self-certify a 35 percent gross revenue loss caused by as a direct or indirect result of COVID-19 for their fishery business in 2020 compared to average revenue for the same time frame from 2015-2019.  The spend plan provides several options for fishermen without the full five-year fishing history to calculate their revenue losses.  Washington residents who commercial fish in Alaska are eligible to apply under some circumstances if they have a qualifying state of Alaska fishing permit, vessel license or federal permit such as IFQ for halibut, sablefish or crab.

The PSMFC recommends that all applicants review state spend plans before filling out the application.  A significant number of Alaska commercial fishing vessels will fall under the seafood processor category under Alaska’s spend plan.  The seafood processing sector includes numerous commercial fishing vessels with processing permits that freeze fish at sea, participate in dive fisheries or direct market their catch or in some cases tender vessels.  Fishermen who fall in one of these categories in particular should review Alaska’s spend plan carefully because there are distinct eligibility and residency criteria for this sector.

There are links to many of the materials on ALFA’s COVID-19 page and the PSMFC’s website, which includes links to approved spend plans, active applications and agency contact information is available here:  https://www.psmfc.org/cares-act-the-coronavirus-aid-relief-and-economic-security-act

 ALFA is providing overviews of relief programs as general information for commercial fishermen. This information is not legal or financial advice. ALFA urges individuals interested in these programs to contact their banker, attorney,  accountant or the PSMFC for specific advice regarding eligibility for their particular situation.

IPHC seeks stakeholder input on economic contribution of Pacific Halibut

16 February 2021

SEATTLE - In order to capture the economic impacts of Pacific halibut, the IPHC has designed a series of surveys to gather information from the sectors relying on this resource. Developing an accurate and representative Pacific halibut multiregional economic impact assessment (PHMEIA) model requires active participation of our stakeholders, who we ask for necessary data for analysis.

Active participants to the Pacific halibut fisheries (commercial, processing, and charter sector) can complete the following surveys for 2020, but also retrospectively submit information for 2019. The benefits of providing both year’s information are:

Data for 2019, covers pre-covid-19 operations, can be considered a baseline suitable for drawing conclusions under normal circumstances and used for predictions.Data for 2020, covers an abnormal year of operations, can be used to assess losses incurred by the Pacific halibut sectors, but also sectors’ resilience to unfavorable circumstances.

Please fill in the IPHC economic survey by clicking the following links:

Commercial Vessel Expenditures Survey (Revised form)Processing Plant Expenditures Survey (Revised form)Charter Sector Expenditures Survey (New)

For further information on the IPHC’s Economic Research visit https://www.iphc.int/management/economic-research or contact the IPHC Secretariat at secretariat@iphc.int or 206.634.1838.

Washington State Cares Act Fisheries Disaster Relief Application period opens with eligibility for Alaska permit holders

NOAA Fisheries recently approved Washington State’s CARES Act fisheries disaster relief spend plan, beginning a 45-day application period.  Applications will need to be uploaded to the PSMFC’s website by 5:00 p.m. PST on March 25, 2021 or postmarked on March 25, 2021.  The Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSMFC) will review applications and distribute funds to qualifying applicants and anticipates making payments in May 2021.  Many commercial fishermen who are Washington state residents and commercial fish in Alaska will be eligible.  Alaska’s spend plan, which also provides eligibility to Washington state residents in some circumstances, is still under review by NOAA Fisheries.

 Washington’s spend plan authorizes direct payments to fishery participants.   There is one pool for the $38.5 million allocated to non-tribal commercial fishing, shellfish aquaculture, seafood processing and charter industry participants.  The state anticipates a variety of claims from fishery and seafood related businesses that range from small sole proprietorships to large corporations.  Because of this variability, direct payment amounts are uncertain and will depend on the total number of claims.  Washington expects claimed losses to exceed funds and its spend plan provides several scaling measures that proportionally reduce payments to ensure distribution across the range of eligible applicants.  In the unlikely event of a surplus, a second application period will open.

 The spend plan sets a qualifying period for losses incurred as a direct or indirect result of COVID between January 1 and July 31, 2020, whether for the full seven months or any partial consecutive period of four weeks or more.  Applicants must self-certify a 35 percent gross revenue loss for their fishery business in 2020 compared to average revenue for the same time frame from 2015-2019.  The spend plan provides several options for fishermen without the full five-year fishing history to calculate their revenue losses.  Applicants will need to compile and retain the documentation needed to report the claimed revenue loss but will not have to submit those records to the PSMFC.

 Washington state residents who commercial fish in Alaska are eligible to apply if they have an Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission vessel license or permit or IFQ permit for crab, halibut or sablefish, and their Washington residence is the listed address.  Fishermen who have received other forms of CARES Act assistance are eligible to apply but must certify that the sum of aid received and traditional revenue will not exceed their average annual revenue earned over the past five years.

The PSMFC recommends that all applicants review the spend plan before filling out the application.  Commercial fishermen can direct residency and other questions direct to the PSMFC by email at WACares@psmfc.org or by phone at 1-866-990-2738.  The PSMFC’s spend plan website is available here:

 https://www.psmfc.org/cares-act-the-coronavirus-aid-relief-and-economic-security-act

 Washington spend plan and application are available at the following links:

http://www.psmfc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/SPEND-PLAN_FINAL_WA_20210122.pdf

 http://www.psmfc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/WA-CARES-Act-Application-20210208_FINAL.pdf

 ALFA is providing overviews of these programs as general information for commercial fishermen. This information is not legal or financial advice. ALFA urges individuals interested in these programs to contact the PSMFC, their attorney or accountant for specific advice regarding eligibility for their particular situation.

The pandemic could change U.S. fisheries forever. Will it be for better or for worse?

The Counter

by Katarina Zimmer

2.18.2021

Not unlike its effect on humans, the pandemic’s impact on the seafood industry has been variable, erratic, often devastating. The first symptoms appeared long before Covid-19 gained a stronghold on U.S. shores, as China went into its first lockdown and a critical export market disappeared overnight—seafood processors and dealers in Maine saw international demand for lobsters temporarily vanish. Then as social distancing rules kicked in here, another major organ of the U.S. supply chain—restaurants, where most seafood purchases are made—fell limp. Then Covid outbreaks at processing plants caused the system to further buckle, leaving many fishermen with nowhere to sell their catch. Prices for many species plummeted. Some fishers gave up for the season, leaving boats tied up at the docks. 

Read the entire article here

Setting Biden's seafood policy table -- Op Ed in The Hill

BY LINDA BEHNKEN AND MIKE CONROY, OPINION CONTRIBUTORS — 02/16/21 10:30 AM EST 80

The Hill

Fishermen have been invited to be partners with the Biden administration on ocean policy and we are prepared to engage. Hard work, honest dialog and commitments to justice and equity will ensure that we remain at the table and not on the menu.

January’s executive order tackling climate change includes ambitious provisions that set agencies on a course to climate mitigation. Most importantly for America’s commercial fishing families, the order established two parallel processes to secure direct input from fishermen on, respectively the appropriate ways to conserve 30 percent of U.S. lands and waters by 2030, an initiative known as 30x30, and ways to make our fisheries more resilient to climate change.

To read the entire op-ed, click here


https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/538931-setting-bidens-seafood-policy-table