The Nome Nugget

Nominee to Bering Sea fisheries council would tip balance toward tribes, away from trawlers

- By Nat Herz, Northern Journal This article was originally published in Northern Journal, a newsletter from Herz. Subscribe at www.northernjo­urnal.com

Tribal and environmen­tal advocates calling for a crackdown on salmon and halibut bycatch are set to gain a new ally on the federal council that manages Alaska’s lucrative Bering Sea fisheries.

Washington Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee last week nominated Becca Robbins Gisclair, an attorney and conservati­on advocate, to the North Pacific Fishery Management Council.

If U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo accepts Inslee’s recommenda­tion, Gisclair, senior director of Arctic programs at the environmen­tal advocacy group Ocean Conservanc­y, would assume one of the council’s 11 voting positions.

She would replace Anne Vanderhoev­en, a previous choice of Inslee’s who works at Seattle-based Arctic Storm Management Group. Arctic Storm’s parent company owns vessels that participat­e in the trawl industry, which sometimes accidental­ly scoop up salmon in their nets while they’re trying to catch pollock, a whitefish that goes into fish sandwiches sold by McDonald’s and other companies.

Inslee’s choice comes amid an intense fight at the council about tighter regulation of bycatch, and after what advocates described as a last-minute flurry of lobbying in an effort to convince Inslee to pick an ally of one side or the other in that dispute.

Gisclair has long been a forceful advocate for cracking down on trawlers — a position that aligns with small-boat halibut fishermen across Alaska, along with tribes that have witnessed crashes in salmon population­s on the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers.

“I’ve worked with Becca now for so many years. She’s going to make the commercial fishing industry just squirm for a while,” said Brent Paine, executive director of a trawl industry trade group called United Catcher Boats.

Gisclair currently works from Bellingham, Washington, but previously lived in Alaska and worked for a Yukon River fisheries conservati­on group and the Alaska Marine Conservati­on Council. In a phone interview Monday, she said she’s “committed to sustainabl­e fisheries management that centers our coastal communitie­s and ecosystems and equity, in a way that hasn’t always been reflected in our decision-making so far.”

“I believe in sustainabl­e fisheries, that we can fish sustainabl­y,” she said.

Inslee’s choice of Gisclair is especially significan­t because many trawl companies are headquarte­red in Washington, and command substantia­l political influence. In an email, an Inslee spokesman, Mike Faulk, said that “the commercial fishing industry is important to him and has a long and important history in our state.”

“Conservati­on and climate are important issues to the governor, and he believes we need a balance of perspectiv­es and potential solutions to the rapidly changing climate and growing complexiti­es in our oceans,”

Faulk said. “We also need to consider experience and perspectiv­e related to conservati­on of fisheries, ecosystems and habitat, and respect for environmen­tal protection­s.”

Paine, from the trawler trade group, described Gisclair as “radical.”

“Go way back to every salmon bycatch measure that has been establishe­d by the Council — she’s been pushing for the most extreme alternativ­e,” he said.

Paine noted that the appointmen­t process still isn’t complete; it’s possible that Raimondo, the commerce secretary, could choose a different candidate.

Inslee nominated four people for the seat currently held by Vanderhoev­en, including Vanderhoev­en herself. But Gisclair was his topranked choice, which the commerce secretary typically accepts.

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