By LAINE WELCH March 16, 2010
The catch share plan for Bering Sea crab was designed the same way. But five years later, loans to buy crab poundage aren't even on the books. What's the hold up? Being near the bottom of the bureaucratic in- box in distant Washington, D.C. "The rulemaking, unfortunately, has taken considerably longer than we had initially thought," said Leo Erwin, Chief of Financial Services at NOAA Fisheries headquarters. "We had the proposed rule, it's been drafted, and it has been in the clearance process for some time. We believe we are pretty close to getting the rule actually published." Senator Lisa Murkowski is credited with obtaining $16 million for Alaska's combined catch share loan programs, and the loan authority for crab is there. But before any cash can be cut loose, it has to go through the long federal law making process before it is official. "They will have to come out with a proposed rule, take comments from the public, go through the rule making, take more comments," said fisheries aide Arne Fuglvog. "I mean, the money is there to do it and we would really like to see these loans coming out this year." Jim Stone, a life-long Bering Sea crabber, said he is frustrated by the federal foot dragging, and it has prevented crew from buying crab poundage. "I find it especially disappointing when the existing crew loan program for halibut and sablefish has near a zero default rate. So why would a program with such a good track record of paying the government back not move forward as quickly as possible. We should have had this in place five years ago. Stone worked his way from deckhand to owner of the F/V Arctic Hunter. He said it is easier now to buy into the crab fishery. "Back when I did it, you
had to make a huge loan and buy a 100-foot boat and make an extremely
big investment. Then you'd roll the dice and go out there with
no guarantee you'd catch anything to pay for the fuel and the
crew and your big bank loan," Stone explained. "Now
you can buy a little bit of quota and start buying in for as
little as $1,000 dollars. You don't have to start out buying
a big chunk." "We would ask them to pay 50% on a small amount and the other 50% we would loan over a 7 to 10 year period. The idea is that they would lease it onboard our own boat," he said. So when might the federal crab loan program be in place? "Perhaps the earliest we would have a final rule in place, assuming we get this proposed rule published relatively soon, which we think will happen, and then we have the comment period, and then we respond to the comments in the final rule, and then that becomes effective," said Leo Erwin. "But I think that process, at the earliest, would look like just before the end of the fiscal year, or perhaps go past the fiscal year, which for the government concludes Sept. 30th." Halibut blows For the second year in a row, icy winds and blizzards bit into the start of Alaska's halibut season. One week into the fishery, only 46 landings totaling 345,728 pounds had crossed the docks in Alaska. Homer scored the first landing - 42,500 pounds that fetched $5.95-$6.25 per pound at the online Auction Block. "It's the highest I ever heard of, a new record," said auction owner Kevin Hogan. "It's supply and demand!" It's not unusual for early fish prices to top $5.00/lb, although last year's prices dropped to $3.50/lb. Hogan said halibut supplies are likely to remain tight for a week or two. "There hasn't been anything coming in from Canada or Southeast," he added. " There is very little fish available and not much on the horizon." What is on the horizon - more blizzards and frigid temperatures throughout the Gulf this week. Alaska supplies 80% of North
America's halibut - more than 42 million pounds this year. But
even after the weather lays down, fishermen won't be in a big
hurry to flood the market. Fish bits Arni Thomson was elected president of United Fishermen of Alaska, the nation's largest commercial fishing advocacy group. Thomson is 20+ year director of Seattle-based Alaska Crab Coalition, and uber-fish policy wonk at state and national levels. Thomson said he is relocating to Anchorage and looks forward to getting up to speed on Alaska salmon fisheries. On the UFA radar: - a national seafood marketing coalition, the sport charter halibut debate and marine spatial planning. UFA is not seeking to shift the fishery use hierarchy at Copper River or anywhere else and supports the state status quo. Bone up on fish! All major candidates for Alaska governor say they will be at Kodiak's famous fisheries debate: Berkowitz, French, Poe, Samuels, Walker, and Gov. Sean Parnell. "Kodiak is home to generations of fishing families, and I stand with them as a staunch advocate. I support increased marketing and streamlined regulations for small businesses so good jobs stay in Kodiak. And, I'm taking the fight against Endangered Species Act listings to Washington," Parnell said via a campaign spokesman. The fish debate is set for May 28 during the Kodiak Crab Fest and will be broadcast statewide. Also on the Rock ComFishAlaska, now in its 31st year, will spotlight: catch shares, Bering Sea crab/5 years later, funding for new entrants, E-Stops, Pebble Mine, fishermen's favorite PFD revealed, Fisher Poets, Off the Grid, more. April 15-17, Kodiak Harbor Convention Ctr. www.comfishalaska.com
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