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Visit bore-head007's column >>

BORE-HEAD007

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Delivering the truth about your agents that gather your seafood for you,US Fishermen.
Articles Posted: 128  Links Seeded: 2006
Member Since: 8/2009  Last Seen: 5/19/2012

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"This system spawns virtual monopolies over our seafood harvest and breeds economic disasters for independent fishing families and fishing communities."

Seeded on Sun Jan 29, 2012 9:35 PM EST
Read ArticleArticle Source: gloucestertimes.com
us-news, bank, share, sectors, northeast-seafood-coalition, vito-giacalone, carlos-rafael, noaas-national-marine-fisheries-service, pat-kavanagh, right-of-first-refusal, 2008-lng-terminal-mitigation-deal, noaa-regional-chief-pat-kurkul, one-entity-on-first-refusal-permit-rights-raises-enormous-free-trade-complications, preservation-fund-permit, quota-accumulation-caps, richie-and-ray-canastra, unfair-inside-move
Seeded by bore-head007
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trade dispute capsulizes flawed fed fishing system

 

The claim by a New Bedford fisherman of an unfair, inside move by local entrepreneur Vito Giacalone and the Gloucester-based Northeast Seafood Coalition certainly raises issues regarding a restraint of trade and free-market business practices.

And fisherman Pat Kavanagh makes a case that, when Giacalone dealt two boats legitimately sought with permits by Kavanagh to New Bedford fishing baron Carlos Rafael instead, Kavanagh was wrongly denied any chance to acquire the boats, permits and the added quota they would have brought to his own business.

But here's the real catch:

According to the catch share trading system put in place by NOAA and its New England fishery Management Council, Giacalone's and the Seafood Coalition's actions fit right in with the government's scheme. As we've noted time and time again, driving the small, independent fishermen down and out of the business while concentrating more control and quota within fewer boats and hands is precisely the way this system has been choreographed to work.

This time, even then-NOAA regional chief Pat Kurkul saw Kavanagh's complaint as a sign of how the Seafood Coalition's 12-sector business pool could "affect the liquidity" of quota trading within the rapidly changing fresh seafood market. And in forwarding her concern to the head of the New England council, she tacitly acknowledges what many within the industry have known since the start: this system spawns virtual monopolies over our seafood harvest and breeds economic disasters for independent fishing families and fishing communities.'

As outlined Saturday by staff writer Richard Gaines, here's the gist of the story:

In a Dec. 2 letter to Kurkul, Kavanagh claims that the Fisheries Preservation Fund that Giacalone manages — one of the coalition's "sectors," when it comes to holding and distributing catch quota for fishermen to "share" — unfairly exercised a "right of first refusal" to direct the multi-species permits Kavanagh had arranged to buy to Rafael instead.

Giacalone maintains he bought the boats and permits on his own, not for the Preservation Fund, which serves as a permit "bank" and was well-stocked with $12 million in state money as part of a 2008 LNG terminal mitigation deal. But when he acquired the two permits and two boats, he reportedly kept the quota, and flipped the boats to Rafael, already New England's dominant leading magnate with some 60 permits tied up in 15 large-scale vessels.

Kavanagh needed the quota, and his letter to Kurkul notes that had a deal in place to until Giacalone's move scooped it up under a first refusal tactic that Giacalone says covers all 12 of the coalition's sectors — by far, the dominant group in New England, with Rafael sitting pretty in Sector 6.

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  • Groups: 112th United States Congress, AAFC, American Progressives, American_Politics, Anti-Discrimination, Bar Room Debates, Bi Partisan Vine Society, Centervine, Commercial Fishing United, Corporate Watchdogs, DemGuys, Democrats, EconVine, Fish Truth Activist Initiative, Fix Magnuson Now, Foodies!, Foreign Affairs & Policy, Free Thinkers, Government & Industry, Happy with Corporate America?, It's the Law!, Media Outrage, NECatch Share Discussion Forum, Occupy Wall Street, Outraged Americans For Justice, Poverty in America, Respectful Debate, Science And Technology, Seeders and Posters w/ Manners, US News and Views , World News and Views
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  • Public Discussion (16)
bore-head007

In a Dec. 2 letter to Kurkul, Kavanagh claims that the Fisheries Preservation Fund that Giacalone manages — one of the coalition's "sectors," when it comes to holding and distributing catch quota for fishermen to "share" — unfairly exercised a "right of first refusal" to direct the multi-species permits Kavanagh had arranged to buy to Rafael instead.

Giacalone maintains he bought the boats and permits on his own, not for the Preservation Fund, which serves as a permit "bank" and was well-stocked with $12 million in state money as part of a 2008 LNG terminal mitigation deal. But when he acquired the two permits and two boats, he reportedly kept the quota, and flipped the boats to Rafael, already New England's dominant leading magnate with some 60 permits tied up in 15 large-scale vessels.

  • 5 votes
Reply#1 - Sun Jan 29, 2012 9:37 PM EST
etva

Thanks for the seed, BH.

  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Sun Jan 29, 2012 10:17 PM EST
bore-head007

etva, the other seeded article has a collection of comments worth reading.

This is an explosive situation.

  • 4 votes
#2.1 - Sun Jan 29, 2012 10:22 PM EST
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
bore-head007

Studds made his first run for Congress in 1970, but lost to the incumbent Republican representative, Hastings Keith, in a close election. In 1972,

I found myself in the US Navy at the time, surely more interested in cars and girls and drinking beer, with very limited interest in politics!

We have had so many great advocates for the fishing industry, and I wish they all were here to witness these darkest days of this industry.

It would not be happening.

  • 4 votes
#2.3 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 3:29 AM EST
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
Reply
JAVE

It's a rigged game. Our nation considers foreign fish a free trade issue. We treat our domestic fish as an environmental issue. Who writes the rules? So we get cheap, unhealthy fish that is caught in environmentally destructive ways. There is a reason the administration encourages that.

The American seafood economy is one of the last preserves of independent operators. It is little surprise it is the target of corporate take over. It doesn't seem even Frank or Kerry has much sway with the Obama administration regarding this issue. This mostly affects people in Democratic states and is pro big business, the GOP is not riding to the rescue.

The real surprise is that so many people that claim to hold anti-corporate, pro-environmental, looking out for the common person and organic, locally sourced produce values continue to run flack for the Obama administration.

Many people claim to be down with the 99%. They moan the loss of local hardware stores to the Home Depot, Bob's diner to McD's and our town's stores and markets to Walmart. The American fishing industry is one that we have Not Lost Yet. Sadly, the people that will rail against the corporate seafood establishment in 5 years are the ones that support the President and his policies today.

Those kind of folks are unwilling to make choices to preserve our domestic seafood and the million of Americans that provide it. They are the same people that mocked and cried jingoism when the Unions and Reagan launched their "Made in the USA" campaign back in the 1980's. Americans were told we were selfish pricks that didn't want to share our piece of the ever expanding pie with the people of our earth. Globalization didn't start out as a bad word.

In the end it matters little. The greatest threat to our fisheries, tourism and all coastal communities is Obama opening up all this land to the oil companies. They have a horrible track record, especially under this administration.

We see how the Gulf disaster turned out. Half that spill on the East Coast would be devastating in every way. The tourism loss in just New Jersey would slam the nation's economy. That Obama's game plan is to outsource the disaster to those that caused it, should give all of us pause.

  • 4 votes
Reply#3 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 12:09 AM EST
bore-head007

Jave. That comment is an article, and trumps everything I've written about this subject.

Please consider publishing this superb view of the situation in article form. Please.

That is such a pointed, accurate statement. BH

  • 3 votes
#3.1 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 2:23 AM EST
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
bore-head007

Geez Bart, their both so good. Can't I just keep em? lol

  • 2 votes
#3.4 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 3:31 AM EST
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
Reply
Lee-479062

Regards Jave's post #3

From Pastor Martin Niemoller:

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I did not speak out;
I was not a Jew.

When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out.

  • 5 votes
Reply#4 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 3:45 AM EST
Bart GruzalskiDeleted
mightyj

When they came to steal our fishing industry we were at sea and did not realize what the mealy mouthed tools of the wealthy were doing while safe ashore

  • 1 vote
#4.2 - Mon Jan 30, 2012 11:04 PM EST
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