Dream of Crewing an Alaskan Fishing Boat? Start Here

The Tyee

By Brendan Jones

June 28th, 2024

As a student at Vermont’s Middlebury College, Lea LeGardeur loved being on the water. Her diminutive size, booming voice and natural ability with the rudder made her a fit for the coxswain position with the Middlebury men’s rowing team. She spent 2 1/2 years steering the group.

“I got accustomed to spending time with guys twice my size.”

Which proved an asset for LeGardeur, who, after teaching geography at Middlebury, decided to commercial fish in Alaska.

LeGardeur’s break came when she discovered the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association, or ALFA, based in the small fishing town of Sitka, Alaska. The organization had an extensive record of fighting foreign fishing, trawling and depletion of resources. ALFA had recently secured a grant to fund its Crew Training Program, or CTP.

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Progress Report: Update on the Sitka Community Boatyard at GPIP

July 19, 2024

The City of Sitka is moving toward the construction phase of a haul out and boatyard at the Gary Paxton Industrial Park.  Below is an update from the July 18, 2024 GPIP meeting provided by Jeremy Serka of Sitka Custom Marine.  Jeremy is under contract with ALFA to assist with boatyard development and fleet outreach.

Michael Harmon, the cities engineer working on the haulout project, described how the City settled on the final scope of work to be completed by the contractors. The final price is $9,281,000 and is set as a “do not exceed” limit for the contractors: Western Marine, K and E Sitka, and Sitka Electric.

PND- preconstruction, permitting and design services = $1,347,537 or 14% of the project,

Western Marine- piers = $6,279.362 or 68% of the project

Travel Hoist purchase = $1,377,800 or 15% of the project

Construction management and CBS indirect costs = $276,341 or 3% of the project.

The scope of the project was reduced due to unexpected pile depths. The following was cut from the project: Total cost around one million dollars.

·      Concrete and hydronic heater coils for wash pad ($500,000). The sump and filtration will be installed but a temporary liner (tarp) will need to be use when washing boats. There is currently no funding for this item but some talk of maybe a potential operator supplying the liner.

·      Electrical hook up and lighting at wash pad ($165,000) – the engineers designed a light pedestal that had some large outlets for plugging in spider boxes to provide power to adjacent vessels near the wash pad.

·      Special investigations and testing: ( $80,000) – there are a handful of potential environmental inspections that could be required ; such as concerns with sea stars and bubble curtain mitigation.

·      Civil / storm drains and expansion of yard around piers to accommodate parking and access to floating dock. ( $310,000)  The engineers had two more storm drains in the uplands to aid in the filtration of any runoff from the yard. Now they will need to grade the yard into one primary storm drain. The overall footprint of the waterside fill was shortened. The extended fill would have extended towards the creek side of the piers to give more room for parking and loading ramp for people exiting their vessel onto a dock.

Possible sources of money to finish phase 1 or contingency .

·      GPIP funds that were never allocated, or money left over for certain projects, may include $100,000 that was allocated towards wash pad in the early days of the project.

·      Interest that has accrued on the 8.1 million hospital money. The money has been earning 4% interest over the last two years, which equates to $648,000. Thor Christianson suggested that these funds should go towards the project; the city administrator appeared to disagree.

Permitting

Permitting is set to be finished in October and is currently in the public comment process. There is some worry that Sitka Tribe may have some opposition to the project as this has happened in the past. Objections could delay the start of construction.

Marine travel lift purchase

A final price of $1,377,800 was settled on for the 150 ton lift from Kendrick Equipment. The machine is set to be built but the contract is still not signed because Kendrick Equipment must provide proof of a bond before the city can sign. We are waiting on them but they say it won’t hold up production.

RFQ ( Request for Qualifications) for haul out operations

·      The GPIP board approved sending the RFQ to the assembly for approval and then solicitation. The RFQ is simply looking for qualified individuals to develop the scope of work to be incorporated into an RFP that will eventually select an operator based on the lowest bid.

·      The administration suggested that there may be some out-of-town interest in running the yard. Bidders who meet the requirements of the RFQ will work with a city group to determine what should be included in the RFP.   The scope of work will include such things as:  pricing for the haul out, storage, electricity and washdown services, lease of available workspace, management of workspaces, maintenance of equipment and property, liability insurance. environmental reporting, billing, etc.

Farm Bill Progress to Support Fishing and Seafood Industries

National Fishermen

June 12th, 2024

NF staff

On Tuesday, June 11, Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee Ranking Member John Boozman released a Farm Bill framework that includes several provisions advancing significant and meaningful benefits to fishing and seafood businesses and communities.

Read here

OPINION: Peltola pulls for Alaska fishermen

Anchorage Daily News

By Linda Behnken

June 9, 2024

Fish news out recently shows us once again that Alaska’s fishermen have a rare champion in Rep. Mary Peltola. Mary introduced two bills that focus on funding NOAA’s bycatch reduction program and advancing critical regulations on trawl gear.

Wild seafood provides food security and livelihoods across the country, but nowhere is that more true than in Alaska. We are fortunate to have a leader who not only has her own boots in fisheries but is bold enough to drive hard conversations around our biggest challenges.

In the North Pacific, that includes bycatch management and habitat protection — not only as a foundation for sustainable management, but as a critical part of climate resilience. We’ve seen the complete collapse of two iconic Alaska crab species, and elimination of subsistence fishing on major rivers with communities highly dependent upon that food resource. We’ve witnessed the abrupt crash of Gulf of Alaska cod following the 2014-2016 marine heat wave. As fish stocks and ocean conditions change more quickly and more substantially than ever before, we need conservation tools that match the pace with that change to safeguard ocean health.

For years, subsistence, commercial, and recreational fishermen in Alaska have asked for meaningful action by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council to protect fish stocks and fish habitat. Countless constituents have voiced concern about the impacts of large-scale trawling on an ecosystem made increasingly vulnerable by climate change. And while the federal fisheries management process is slow and deliberate by design — and the nature of these issues has made it even more so — the hard truth is that the impacts are quickly out-pacing action, and we cannot afford to wait.

Along with most of Alaska’s fishermen, Rep. Peltola recognizes the need for action. She also recognizes the importance of management being ultimately driven by the regional management councils and their stakeholder processes. This is why her bills focus on empowering progressive regional change — by funding the Bycatch Reduction Engineering Program already championed by North Pacific fleets, and by calling on the councils to do the important work of clearly defining the functions and limitations of trawl gear.

The latter has been a particular point of concern for Alaskans over the past several years. Trawl fisheries make up 97% of the fishing footprint in the North Pacific. That means that if trawling has unassessed negative impacts on habitat or fish stocks, then the potential for harm is significant. This has become the most concerning in the regulation of trawl gear in contact with the ocean floor.

Pelagic trawl is often described as a “mid-water” trawl, operating off the seabed and away from the fragile habitats and organisms living there. This is theoretically why pelagic trawls are allowed to fish in areas and at times when bottom trawling is banned. The pelagic trawl fleet in the North Pacific primarily fishes for pollock, the largest food fishery on the planet. It turns out their nets also spend a great deal of time in contact with the ocean floor. In fact, Council analysis estimates as much as 60% of the time for catcher vessels, and as much as 100% of the time deployed for catcher processors.

North Pacific regulations do not limit the time that pelagic trawls may be in contact with the seabed, nor do they define pelagic trawl operations in the context of proximity to the seafloor. This is a critical gap in our sustainability matrix and Mary is trying to correct it.

As an Alaskan and a commercial fisherman, I’m grateful to have a Representative who sees the value and potential of our fisheries and takes meaningful steps to protect them. These dialogues push us to be leaders in sustainable fisheries, to learn from our challenges and innovate. This is the kind of work that will get fishing communities through unprecedented times, and it is what good stewardship looks like — hard conversations about how to adapt and improve today, so that we can all go fishing tomorrow.

Linda Behnken is a commercial fisherman from Sitka, and the Executive Director of the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association.

https://www.adn.com/opinions/2024/06/09/opinion-peltola-pulls-for-alaska-fishermen/

NMFS issues Positive 90-day finding on wild fish conservancy petition to list alaska chinook populations under the endangered species act

On Friday, May 24, the National Marine Fisheries Service issued a positive 90-day finding on the Wild Fish Conservancy’s petition to list Chinook stocks that spawn in rivers that flow into the Gulf of Alaska as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. These stocks include Chinook populations that range from Kodiak Island, Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound to Southeast Alaska. The Wild Fish Conservancy, an anti-small boat commercial fishing group from Washington State, claims that Alaska is degrading Chinook habitat, overharvesting Chinook, and failing to implement measures that provide protections for Alaska’s Chinook stocks. 

NMFS’ 90 day finding begins a 60-day public comment period seeking information about Gulf of Alaska Chinook salmon from the public, government agencies, Alaska Native organizations, scientists, conservation groups, fishing groups, and other interested parties. The agency seeks information on Chinook ecology and abundance trends, fishery impacts, threats, habitat conditions, and the effectiveness of ADF&G management measures. The comment deadline July 23, 2024. Fishermen can submit comments to Gulf of Alaska Chinook Salmon Petition, docket# NOAA-NMFS-2024-0042 at the regulations website: https://www.regulations.gov The Wild Fish Conservancy’s petition is available at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/endangeredspecies-conservation/candidate-speciesunder-endangered-species-act .


Peltola Introduces Pair of Fish Bills to Restrict Bottom Trawling, Reduce Bycatch

Representative Mary Peltola (AK-AL) introduced a pair of bills to restrict bottom trawling and reduce bycatch – the bipartisan Bycatch Reduction and Mitigation Act and the Bottom Trawl Clarity Act.

“Since coming to Congress, I’ve worked to make fish and fishing policy the issue of national importance it deserves to be,” said Rep. Peltola. “I know fish, I know Alaska, and I know how to work with people in both parties to get stuff done.”

The Bycatch Reduction and Mitigation Act supports Alaskan fishermen working to reduce bycatch by:

  • Authorizing the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s Bycatch Reduction and Engineering Program (BREP) at $10 million for five years.

  • Establishing the Bycatch Mitigation Assistance Fund, to be administered by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and used to help fishermen and vessel owners purchase new gear or technology to reduce bycatch – such as camera systems, lights, and salmon excluders.

View full bill text HERE. Read a one pager on the legislation HERE. The bipartisan bill is cosponsored by Rep. Garrett Graves (R-LA-06) and Rep. Jared Huffman (D-CA-02). 

The Best Fish Is Also the Most Local. Why Is It So Hard to Find?

New York Times

By Melissa Clark

April 25, 2024

Seafood caught in nearby waters has long been left out of the farm-to-table movement. But these people have set out to get it into stores and restaurants.

“Every year, we lose more fishing families because of economics,” Mr. Boyle said. “The

kids feel like they have to leave because they can’t make a living.”

Some 65 percent to 80 percent of the seafood consumed in the United States is imported,

while the country exports much of its seafood (worth about $5 billion in 2023), said

Joshua Stoll, an associate professor of marine policy at the University of Maine and a

founder of the Local Catch Network. Sending seafood overseas shifts a significant portion

of profits away from fishing communities that desperately need it.

Read full article here

After overshadowing climate talks, the myth of ‘circularity’ looms over the UN plastics treaty

Fortune

BY Judith Enck and Pamela Miller

April 24, 2024 at 3:44 AM MDT

Delegates from 191 countries meet once again this month for the UN plastics treaty talks in Ottawa, and they need to avoid falling into industry traps that will hinder real progress. Dowchair and CEO Jim Fitterling’s recent Commentary in Fortune is a perfect example of how to ensure failure in Ottawa. If delegates commit to the priorities he outlined, they will fail to implement real solutions to the growing problem caused by his company and companies like it.

Read Full Article

A first step toward a global price on carbon

New York Times

By Manuela Andreoni and Max Bearak

March 28th, 2024

It didn’t make many headlines, but last week, at a meeting of the International Maritime Organization, something potentially world-changing happened.

The United Nations agency, which regulates the shipping industry, essentially committed to creating the world’s first global carbon price.

Read it here.

Murkowski Announces Investments for Sitka in FY24 Six-Bill Appropriations Package

Washington, DC – U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), a senior member of the Senate Appropriation Committee and Ranking Member of the Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee, announced investments for Sitka on the six-bill Fiscal Year 2024 appropriations package. The bill passed the Senate in a bipartisan 78-22 vote.

 

“After months of unnecessary delay, Congress has finally taken a big step by passing six of our 12 appropriations bills for Fiscal Year 2024 on an overwhelmingly bipartisan basis. Considering the vast size of our state and limited infrastructure, the significant investments I have included in these measures are well-justified and much-needed,” Murkowski said. “From programmatic wins to congressionally directed spending projects, the funding I have secured is the direct result of working together with Alaskans from across the state to address the needs of their communities. This package invests in our military while enabling us respond to workforce shortages, food insecurity, clean drinking water needs, the housing crunch, the high cost of energy, crises in our fisheries, and more.”

 

“The effects of the housing shortage have been seen across the state, but nowhere are the impacts felt more acutely than in Sitka. Securing over $2 million for the Sitka Community Development Corporation to build a new apartment complex will offer new home ownership opportunities for first time buyers, with the Trust’s model of ownership preserving that affordability permanently. Thanks to the partnership of the city and the borough, we are looking at a new neighborhood of fourteen homes plus apartment units.”

 

Click here or the icon above to download an audio version of Senator Murkowski’s quote.

 

Alaskans have expressed their appreciation for Senator Murkowski’s work to deliver these strategically targeted investments.

 

“The Sitka Community Land Trust is deeply grateful for the funding which Senator Murkowski has secured for an apartment building in Sitka,” said Randy Hughey, Sitka Community Land Trust. “This CDS will enable the work of this non-profit to continue for years. This helps Sitka a great deal!”

 

“Senator Murkowski’s support for the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association’s Boat Energy Transition Accelerator (ALFA BETA) Feasibility Study is a huge step toward lowering energy costs in Alaska’s seafood industry and reducing our fleet's carbon footprint,” said Linda Behnken, Executive Director of the Alaska Longline Fishermen's Association. “With Senator Murkowski’s leadership, our fishing communities will drive the transition to locally-generated and renewable energy. We are tremendously grateful for Senator Murkowski relentless advocacy for Alaska’s fisheries.” 

 

FY24 Six-Bill Appropriations Package Highlights for Sitka:

 

Expanding Housing, Childcare, and Community Development Access

 

Murkowski listened to the needs of Alaskans and worked to bring home funding for housing and childcare facilities in the state. She also focused on protecting Alaska’s diverse history and landmarks—from the Iditarod Trail to Native languages, Murkowski is working to ensure future generations have access to our state’s rich history.

 

·       Statewide: $3.3 million for the Alaska Department of Public Safety to establish rural public safety housing.

·       Sitka: $2.17 million for the Sitka Community Development Corporation to build an apartment complex. 

 

Cleaner and More Affordable Energy

 

As a leading voice on energy, Murkowski continues to provide crucial support to advance Alaska projects and make our state’s energy cleaner and more affordable. In this package she provided support for tidal energy projects, secured funding for critical mineral activities, and provided for the Arctic Energy Office to support projects in rural communities and throughout the Arctic.

 

·       Sitka: $514,000 for the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association to research and identify decarbonization and clean energy transition options for vessel owners and shoreside businesses.

 

Strengthening Alaska Fisheries and Oceans Research

 

Alaska’s oceans and fisheries are the heartbeat of communities across the state—and that’s why Murkowski worked hard to include provisions throughout the appropriations package that will strengthen our blue economy, support coastal communities, promote electronic monitoring development and installation, and enhance research abilities to create healthier fisheries.

 

Murkowski helped secure more than $205 million for Fisheries Data Collections, Surveys, and Assessments; $44 million for Regional Fishery Management Councils and Fisheries Commissions; and $65 million for the Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund. 

 

She also secured the following CDS requests to strengthen Alaska’s fisheries and oceans research abilities:

 

·       Statewide: $2.01 million for the Marine Exchange of Alaska to create a user guide to keep ships sailing safely in the Arctic.

·       Statewide: $1.2 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to fund coastal marine surveys that support sustainable salmon management in the northern Bering Sea, southern Bering Sea, and western Gulf of Alaska.

·       Statewide: $2.5 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to better equip their research vessels with necessary technology and upgrades.

·       Statewide: $4 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to fund juvenile Pacific salmon research.

·       Statewide: $2 million for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game for research and equipment related to Alaska critical salmon stocks.

·       Statewide: $2.8 million for the University of Alaska System to research the impacts of environmental stressors on freshwater and marine aquatic life in Alaska.

 

Fighting Illegal Drug Use

 

As illegal drugs devastate families and communities throughout Alaska, Murkowski continues to fight for drug prevention efforts and support for those impacted by this terrible scourge. In addition to the recently enacted FEND Off Fentanyl Act, she has supported the Community Based Coalition Enhancement Grant Program, which will encourage community-led coalitions to raise awareness of fentanyl and prevent drug overdose deaths caused by the drug. 

 

·       Statewide: Murkowski continues to support the Drug Free Communities program and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program. 

·       Statewide: Murkowski has pushed to ensure that medication assisted treatment is available and accessible to individuals with substance use disorder (SUD). The bill includes language to permanently require state Medicaid plans to cover medication-assisted treatment, and to allow treatment of SUD at institutions

Supporting Victim Services, Public Safety and Services Efforts, and Vulnerable Populations

 

Murkowski continues to focus on preventing domestic violence and sexual assault in Alaska and providing critical services for victims. From funding the Sexual Assault Services Program at $80 million, to advocating for increases to the Services for Rural Victims program—she is working to provide significant support for Alaskans who are at risk or in need. Murkowski is also dedicated to supporting survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault while investing in projects that work to stop the violence from occurring in the first place.

 

·       Statewide: $4 million for the Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault to support victim services organizations.

 

 

 

Ensuring Access to Quality Health Care

 

Murkowski continues to fight for funding to increase access to health care. She has continued to support additional funding for the Community Health Centers and the National Health Service Corps, programs that provide critical care to Alaskans throughout the state.

 

This appropriation’s package also includes a boost in Medicare pay for doctors to address the additional strain that physicians saw when physician reimbursement was cut on January 1, ensuring our providers receive adequate reimbursement and that our Seniors continue to have access to their providers. Community Health Centers were reauthorized through 2024, with a much needed increase of $270 million in annual funding.

 

Bolstering Food Security

 

Murkowski worked with her colleagues to ensure support for Alaska’s farmers and help them increase food security. Some of her top priorities were ensuring programmatic funding for essential programs for Alaska’s food security, including an increase for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and full funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Additional programmatic wins include increasing for the Summer Food Service Program, enabling children in low-income families to receive the nutrition they need when schools are closed.

 

Background:

 

H.R. 4366 includes the annual funding bills from the Appropriations Subcommittees on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies; Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies; Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies; Energy and Water Development; Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies; and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies.  

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For further information, please contact Senator Murkowski’s press office at 202-224-9301 or 202-224-8069. Visit our website at http://murkowski.senate.gov