San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Attacks in land of ‘Jaws’ add teeth to shark fears

- By Philip Marcelo

BOSTON — The seaside destinatio­n that gave the world “Jaws” is going through its own, real-life shark crisis.

Two shark attacks, including the nation’s lone human fatality so far this year, have sparked months of debate on Cape Cod about how to respond before the start of the next beach season.

The question promises to be among the most closely watched of 2019 in Massachuse­tts. The region south of Boston where the 1975 blockbuste­r was filmed hosts about 4 million visitors a year and represents more than $1 billion in tourism spending, not to mention thousands of local jobs.

“Many of these solutions might sound good, but the devil’s in the details,” says Gregory Skomal, a state marine biologist who has been studying the region’s great whites for years and has been involved in the local debates. “It’s ultimately going to come down to what’s feasible.”

On Sept. 15, 26-year-old Revere resident Arthur Medici was attacked by a shark while boogie boarding off a beach in Wellfleet. His death was the state’s first human shark fatality since 1936.

Weeks earlier, 61-yearold New York resident Bill Lytton survived a shark attack while swimming off a beach in nearby Truro by punching the powerful predator in the gills. He spent months recovering in a Boston hospital from the Aug. 15 attack, which was the state’s first since 2012.

The attacks have sparked spirited forums drawing out a colorful slice of the Cape Cod community, from surfers and environmen­tal activists to marine biologists, commercial fisherman, lifelong residents and shop owners. Those gatherings aren’t expected to diminish next year.

Among the first will be a “Shark Conversati­on” with state officials, business leaders, scientists and others that the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce is organizing. Wendy Northcross, the chamber’s CEO, says the hope is to brainstorm ways to “maintain confidence in Cape Cod as a destinatio­n and to keep people safe.”

Making sure visitors at some of the peninsula’s most remote beaches can quickly alert emergency officials is among the early priorities identified by town officials. Some communitie­s are looking into installing emergency call boxes or pay phones near beach entrances. Others also have suggested appealing to mobile carriers to boost cell coverage that can be spotty at best in places.

Placing “trauma kits” stocked with tourniquet­s, gloves and other medical supplies at beaches is another measure local officials are planning to introduce in 2019. Leslie Reynolds, chief ranger for the Cape Cod National Seashore, says it has already purchased kits for its six federally managed beaches. She says they’ll be strategica­lly placed where the public can quickly access them when lifeguards aren’t on duty.

Local police and fire department­s, meanwhile, have been hosting public trainings on how to tie a proper tourniquet, and some officials have discussed possibly extending lifeguard service beyond the traditiona­l season’s end on Labor Day.

Constructi­ng ocean barriers to enclose popular swimming beaches has been discussed by officials in recent years as the shark population has surged. Netted barriers are used in parts of Australia, South Africa and Hong Kong. But the netting could be harmful to other marine life.

Philip Marcelo is an Associated Press writer.

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