Friday, February 27, 2009

Have It Your Way -- You Heard a Seal Bark

A harbor seal lolling on the beach in Milford drew a crowd the other day. A fellow named Bob Adams sent me this video (and here's his blog):

The Cost of Commercial Shellfishing Goes Up

boats

If your local school district wants to increase your property taxes, it comes up with a new budget and asks residents to vote on it, up or down. If your town wants to increase your property taxes, it too makes a new budget and then holds a public hearing and votes on it, in public.

The state of Connecticut though can apparently increase the per-acre "tax" it charges oystermen by simply making a decision at the department level. In January, the Department of Agriculture's division of aquaculture, which regulates the shellfishing industry in Long Island Sound, raised the per-acre "tax" on shellfish beds from $30 to $200.

Shellfishermen are outraged. They say such a steep increase will put them out of business. The state says it needs the money to run the division that oversees oystering.

I hate to be so wishy-washy but this is clearly one of those situations where both sides are right. An increase of $170 per acre, essentially overnight, is a huge burden. My impression is that for the most part oystermen work hard and make an honest living but are hardly affluent. As Soundkeeper and State Legislator Terry Backer points out in this story, in the Stamford Advocate, any increase in costs to the oystermen will result in an increase in costs to the consumer, and since most of the consumers are restaurants, they will happily go out-of-state to buy cheaper oysters and clams.

But the Advocate also points out that the increase is the first since 1968. Oystermen and clammers paid $30 an acre for 40 years, so in some ways they've had the benefit of an extraordinarily friendly regulatory system. Clearly the head of the aquaculture division thinks the fees should have been raised more gradually over the years but that they weren't because of the influence of one big oyster company. Now he's trying to make things more equitable.

The other thing to keep in mind is that the $200 per acre isn't really a tax. The oystermen don't own the land they harvest oysters from -- the state does. They oyster beds are a public resource that the oystermen have exclusive rights to. Even if you think, as I do, that oystering is exactly the kind of compatible industry that Long Island Sound should have more of, it's still a privilege that should be paid for.

On top of all that, the state also is imposing a fee of $1 per bushel on shellfishermen, to help pay for the costs of inspecting the waters, to make sure typhoid-infused oysters aren't making it onto our tables.

Oystermen are pissed. On the other hand, businesses everywhere are making less money and cutting back. It may just be tough luck.

The photo, by the way, is of oyster sloops working Bridgeport Natural Bed, I think, although they might be working off the Rowaytown-Norwalk area -- I've never been sure.)

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Thursday, February 05, 2009

Bluefish, Yes; Striped Bass, No

Captain Morgan, who sells fishing equipment to recreational anglers, argued in his newspaper column/ad-for-his-business back in October that recreational anglers should catch and eat more bluefish without mentioning the health advisory on bluefish.

Now he's arguing in his newspaper column/ad-for-his-business that commercial fishing for striped bass should not be allowed in Connecticut because of the health advisory on striped bass.

Sounds like if it's good for his business, he's for it.

But if it's potentially bad for his business (and recreational anglers have opposed commercial striped bass fishing for decades because they think it would leave fewer stripers for them to catch) he's against it.

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