The Day

Group of fishermen repeat regulatory woes at Mystic forum

Panel warns that government regulation­s could sink their industry

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer — Joe Wojtas m.shanahan@theday.com

Mystic — A panel of Stonington fishermen and fishing industry lobbyists repeated their perennial cries against the federal government’s fishing quotas at an event hosted by state Sen. Heather Somers on Wednesday night, telling an audience at the Mystic Luxury Theatre that the regulation­s could cause the demise of their industry.

Somers invited Stonington and Rhode Island fishing veterans to speak about the effects of a regulatory system used by the National Marine Fisheries Service that is meant to prevent overfishin­g but that they say is strangling their industry. She also arranged for the screening of a commercial fishing-themed episode of a show produced by the conservati­ve digital website CRTV at the theater.

“We people up here in Connecticu­t got the dirty end of the stick,” said Joe Rendeiro, a retired full-time commercial fisherman. “We’re just a bunch of people trying to make a living.”

Stonington fishermen like Rendeiro have long bemoaned the government’s attempts to regulate fishing by institutin­g quotas for species like fluke — also called summer flounder — in regions along the East Coast from the mid-Atlantic to New England.

The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, on which Connecticu­t has no representa­tion, regulates fluke and other species for the East Coast, along with a larger body, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. Fishing industry advocates say the quota system allows Connecticu­t fishermen to land far less fish than other states such as North Carolina, even though

First Selectman Rob Simmons put the item on Wednesday night’s agenda after Matt Troutman of 51 East Main St. emailed him requesting a new ordinance be created to govern acceptable hours for landscapin­g and snow removal. He suggested that businesses not be allowed to perform the work between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m.

“Thanks so much and I hope that we can make some progress on adjusting peaceful hours in Stonington!” wrote Troutman, whose home is adjacent to CVS and Citizen’s Bank. He could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

Simmons said he and police received calls Wednesday from residents opposing the ban on nighttime snow removal.

Simmons and Selectman John Prue were opposed to the ban, saying snow contractor­s often need to work through the night to ensure the safety of their customers while pharmacies such as CVS need to have lots cleared for customers to pick up medication­s when they reopen. Selectwoma­n Kate Rotella said she did not have enough informatio­n to make a decision on Wednesday and wanted to talk to more people. A few residents also opposed the ban at Wednesday’s meeting.

The town’s nuisance ordinance currently prohibits unreasonab­ly loud, disturbing or unnecessar­y noise that can be heard inside a home before 6 a.m. and after 10 a.m. Monday through Saturday and before 8 a.m. and after 10 p.m. on Sunday. There are most of the fish are caught in federal and not state waters.

The two groups adjusted their limits this year to allow Connecticu­t fishermen to catch more summer flounder and not as much sea bass in 2018, but Stonington fishermen say the effects of the changing quotas would be nominal given an unfair system.

The quotas and the monitors employed to enforce them, cheap imported fish, the developmen­t of wind farms on the Atlantic coast and the 1976 Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservati­on and Management Act were all the target of criticism from the speakers at Wednesday’s event.

exceptions for activities such as snow-removal equipment.

The panel also included Mike Gambardell­a, who runs his family’s fish wholesale business at the Town Dock and who has led an effort to print and sell bumper stickers with a message for President Donald Trump urging him to “Make Commercial Fishing Great Again.”

Atlantic fishermen say the quotas that govern the amount of fish they’re allowed to bring in are based on inaccurate measuremen­ts of fish population­s, and have long claimed that they see higher numbers of various species on their daily trips than the NOAA scientists count on their periodic trips to assess the population­s

when interactin­g with police, when a landlord wants to raise the rent, in the case of an accident or injury, in a divorce or when planning for an elderly loved one. Sessions also will be offered on small claims, immigratio­n cases and veteran’s benefits.

Twenty-five people attended last year’s event. The March 21st presenters: Immigratio­n: attorney Michael Doyle at 6 p.m.

Divorce, Custody & Child Support: attorneys Robert Tukey and Paige Quilliam at 6 p.m.

Injury: attorney Jason Burdick at 7 p.m.

Small Claims Court: attorney Robert Clark at 7 p.m. March 28th presenters: Elder Law: attorney Deborah on which they base their quotas.

“The stock assessment­s are wrong,” said Tom Williams, a Stonington fisherman who spoke Wednesday and was featured in the CRTV piece hosted by conservati­ve blogger Michelle Malkin.

Somers invited Meghan Lapp, a fishing industry advocate and a representa­tive for North Kingstown, R.I.based fishing company Seafreeze to speak at Wednesday’s event.

“Fishermen are the farmers of the sea,” she said. “They ... provide a clean, healthy sustainabl­e source of protein.” Hadaway at 6 p.m.

Criminal Law: NLPD Chief Reichard and attorney Michael Blanchard at 6 p.m.

Landlord/Tenant: attorney Natalia Planell at 7 p.m.

Veteran’s Benefits: Ryan McKenna at 7 p.m.

Participan­ts are asked to enter Bennie Dover Jackson Middle School, 36 Waller St., New London, through the doors on Waller Street.

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