South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Crab fishing is deadliest of catches for Ore. town

Community mourns loss of 3 fishermen

- By Antonia Noori Farzan The Washington Post

On Jan. 3, the day before Oregon’s Dungeness crab fishing season was set to start, conditions looked bleak.

“Crabbers to sail into storm,” read a headline in the Newport News Times, which noted 20-foot swells and gusts of up to 55 mph were predicted.

Among the commercial fishing boats leaving from Yaquina Bay in Newport, Ore., was the Mary B II, a wooden 42-foot fishing vessel. Stephen Biernacki, 50, and James Lacey, 48, had recently decided to try their luck at catching Dungeness crab after fishing off the coast of New Jersey for years. Joining them on board was Joshua Porter, 50, an experience­d fisherman known locally for helping countless addicts through recovery after getting sober himself more than a decade before.

None of them would make it home. At around 10 p.m. on Tuesday, the crew of the Mary B II were headed back to the docks when they reached the Yaquina Bay bar — the point at which at the Yaquina River meets the Pacific Ocean, creating massive, unpredicta­ble swells that can easily overwhelm smaller vessels. That night, the U.S. Coast Guard mea- sured 16-foot high waves near the bay’s entrance.

A crew had been on its way to help escort the Mary B II across the bar, the Coast Guard said in a news release Wednesday. But before they could get there, the fishing boat abruptly capsized, tossing two of the men overboard.

“They took about a 20foot breaker over the bow,” Coast Guard Chief Warrant Officer Thomas Malloy told KOIN. “We lost total visibility of the vessel.”

The Coast Guard immediatel­y launched flares and began searching the darkened seas with lifeboats and a helicopter. Lacey’s body was located floating in the Pacific Ocean first, according to the Oregon State Police. Then, a little after midnight, the Newport Fire Department f o u n d Po r t e r ’s body washed up on the beach. By Wednesday morning, the waves had pushed the crab boat aground, allowing the fire crew to go inside the cabin. They found Biernacki’s body there.

Fishing for Dungeness crabs, which fetch premium prices at seafood markets, is one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. In addition to the long work hours and freezing temperatur­es, crab fishermen must contend with the unpredicta­ble storms that batter the coast of the Pacific Northwest in winter.

Commercial fishing has one of the highest fatality rates of any occupation, according to the National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health. A 2016 Oregon State University study analyzing Coast Guard data found that the fatality rate for Dungeness crab fishermen was even higher. The extreme conditions were perhaps most famously highlighte­d in “Deadliest Catch: Dungeon Cove,” a 2016 reality show for the Discovery Channel that followed Yaquina Bay crab fishermen.

In Newport, a city of more than 10,000 where the economy is driven by commercial fishing, those risks are well-known. Still, the news of the three deaths came as a shock.

“This stuff happens, but it just doesn’t get any easier,” Gary Ripka, a commercial fisherman based in Newport who was featured on “Deadliest Catch,” told KEZI.

A friend of Porter’s, Celeste Paranto, told the Oregonian that he had intended the trip to be his last on the Mary B II. “He told friends that the crew was inexperien­ced,” she said. “Those were his words. It’s very sad. Because he was a responsibl­e person he went out on the trip and never returned home.”

But others in the seafaring community have argued that even a seasoned captain can easily run afoul of the hazardous conditions outside the Yaquina Bay. “A very good friend of mine had 40 years’ experience, lost his life on the bar,” Ripka told KATU. “It doesn’t get easier when you get older doing it.”

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