Out-of-State Trawlers Depleting R.I. Herring
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
Out-of-state fishing trawlers, about 150 feet long, have been fishing close to the Narragansett and Charlestown shoreline since January, scooping up massive hauls of herring and allegedly damaging fishing equipment and boats.
Using a technique called pair-trawling, pairs of the big vessels are collecting schools of herring by fixing themselves to opposite ends of a large drag net.
Using a technique called pair-trawling, pairs of the big vessels are collecting schools of herring by fixing themselves to opposite ends of a large drag net.
According to state officials, about a half-dozen pair-trawlers have already netted 80 percent of the state's catch limit for the entire year. Last year at this time, only 20 percent of the catch limit had been reached.
At a Statehouse hearing Feb. 9, Rich Fuka, president of the Rhode Island Fishermen's
Rep. Teresa Tanzi , D-Narragansett/Wakefield, filed a bill banning pair-trawling until March 2013, after learning about damage to fixed-gear lobster pots as well as another incident of a smaller Rhode Island fishing boat getting ensnared in a pair-trawler net.
"Had (the boat's) net not ripped, he would have been taken under," Tanzi said.
"I hate those trawlers, too. It's just been horrible out there," said Rep. Joseph McNamara, D-Warwick/Cranston, a member of the House Environment and Natural Resources Committee.
The state Department of Environmental Management (DEM) didn't oppose or endorse the bill. The DEM is not worried about overfishing, but did express concern about the economic impact of fishing revenue moving out of state. Smaller, local fishing boats also catch herring and have them processed at a Quonset Point facility. DEM policy expert Nicole Poepping said another processor is also being considered for Gallilee.
The House environmental committee unanimously approved the bill and sent it back to the House for a vote. The ban is not likely to get a full vote in the House until after a Senate hearing Feb. 14.
The issue is also expected to be discussed at a March meeting of the Marine Fisheries Council.
For a local fisherman's take on the issue, click here. (link temporarily removed, see comment below)