The Ukiah Daily Journal

Fishermen concerned about 2022 rule

- By Mario Cortez mcortez@times-standard.com

Tim Klassen has operated Real Steel Sport Fishing out of the Eureka Harbor for the past 15 years. But his passenger excursions out to sea may come to an end if proposed air quality regulation­s for passenger vessels go into effect.

CARB’S commercial harbor craft rule, originally adopted in 2007 and amended in 2010 is set to be fully implemente­d by the end of 2022. The rule was originally adopted to reduce particulat­e emissions and other exhaust matter coming from several types of vessels using diesel engines in regulated California waters.

Commercial and commercial passenger vessels were previously listed under the same category by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The rule set to be implemente­d would separate the boat categories, with stricter regulation­s for commercial passenger fishing vessels going into effect.

Compliance with regulation­s would force the operators of the commercial passenger boats to either retrofit their vessels with an appropriat­e “tier 4” engine or to purchase a new boat, both of which can put operators out of business.

“If the regulation­s go through as they’re proposed right now, probably the majority of us would be out of business,” Klassen said.

Compliance is currently not feasible for many; he said.

“A new engine for my boat that would be compliant is about $60,000. … A boat like mine with a new engine is about $400,000,” Klassen pointed out.

The Sportfishi­ng Associatio­n of California is lobbying against implementi­ng the new emissions rule.

“Before the owners of sportfishi­ng and whale watching boats can recover their financial losses from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Newsom Administra­tion proposed draconian regulation­s that will remove hundreds of familyoper­ated boats from service,” Ken Franke, president of the Sportfishi­ng Associatio­n of California, said in a statement. “Given that the regulation­s were drafted during the COVID-19 pandemic and without any in-person public workshops, boat owners are learning for the first time that their days at sea are numbered and their livelihood­s may be lost.”

A study undertaken by the CSU Maritime Academy for CARB also states there are no engines that would comply with the proposed standards, and alteration­s to installed engines for compliance would destabiliz­e the vessels.

“They want a level of emissions compliance on engines that aren’t even available yet. And the (engines) that would comply, would not fit into any of our boats. So, basically, we’d have to buy whole new boats, and start from scratch and there’s just not that kind of money in this business to do that,” Klassen said.

Operators have until regulation­s go into effect in 2022 to comply, but can also request up to six years of extensions to be able to meet the cost of meeting the regulation standards.

Upgrading or replacing his sole vessel would force Klassen and other operators to double his prices just to keep up with the costs of timely compliance, leaving his customers priced out.

Klassen, who takes an average of 500 anglers out to sea per year, pointed to the local owner-operated passenger fishing boat industry as a local economic driver.

“I think there’s about a dozen (boats) in Humboldt Bay, there’s probably another half a dozen and in Trinidad, there’s a few in Shelter Cove, there’s some in Crescent City, so we bring in a lot of tourist business. People come here specifical­ly to fish from Redding, Red Bluff or Chico and even from out of state. They come in they spend money at motels and restaurant­s and stuff so I mean, there’s more of an economic benefit for the community than just what we take in,” he elaborated.

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 ?? SHAUN WALKER — THE TIMES-STANDARD ?? Fishing boats sit at Eureka Public Marina.
SHAUN WALKER — THE TIMES-STANDARD Fishing boats sit at Eureka Public Marina.

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