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The Daily Signal

INTERVIEW | How Regulations Threaten New England Fishermen

The Daily Signal

The Daily Signal

Government, Daily News, News, Politics

4.81.4K Ratings

🗓️ 29 June 2023

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

New England fishermen are facing growing regulations—from the amount of fish they are allowed to catch to large sections of ocean they can no longer work because of “offshore wind development.”  “The New England fishermen are the most regulated fishermen in the world,” Jerry Leeman says. Leeman has been fishing in Maine his entire life. His father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were all fishermen.  The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration collects data and determines how much of a certain kind of fish the fishermen are allowed to process, Leeman says, but the limits have been so greatly reduced in some categories of fish that it is “making it so unviable for us to even make a profit." It's forcing boats either out of the industry or forcing them to lease their quota just to make ends meet. Federal regulations have now reduced the amount of haddock landings for commercial fishermen by more than 80%, Leeman said.   The reduction in fish that fishermen are allowed to catch and “offshore wind development,” which is taking over “just under 10 million acres” of ocean, prompted Leeman, along with fisherman Dustin Delano, to create the New England Fishermen's Stewardship Association to advocate for the region's fishermen.  The association launched in May to “keep the resource viable for our heritage, for the next generation to be able to process a resource for the U.S. consumer,” Leeman says. If something doesn't change, Leeman says, America will be further "dependent on other nations to feed us with protein resources.”  Leeman and Delano join “The Daily Signal Podcast” to explain how New England fishermen are being regulated out of their industry, and what they are doing to preserve commercial fishing for the next generation of New Englanders.  Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the Daily Civil Podcast for Thursday, June 29th, I'm Prudent Allen.

0:10.8

New England fishermen are facing growing regulations.

0:14.4

From the amount of fish they're allowed to catch to a whole section of ocean, they can

0:19.4

no longer work because of offshore wind development.

0:23.4

According to main fishermen, Jerry Lehman, the regulations have placed all New England

0:29.1

commercial fishermen at risk.

0:32.5

That is why Lehman and Dustin Delano formed the New England Fisherman Stewardship Association.

0:39.3

The association exists to advocate for New England fishermen and preserve the craft

0:44.8

of fishing for the next generation.

0:47.7

Lehman and Delano join me on the show today to explain their fight against government

0:53.7

regulations not only to preserve their own livelihood, but to ensure that America

0:59.1

doesn't become dependent on foreign nations for our fish.

1:03.4

Stay tuned for our conversation after this.

1:06.9

As conservatives, sometimes it feels like we're constantly on defense against bad ideas.

1:12.0

Bad philosophy, revisionist history, junk science, and divisive politics.

1:17.3

But here's something I've come to understand.

1:19.2

When faced with bad ideas, it's not enough to just defend.

1:22.2

If we want to save this country, then it's time to go on offense.

1:27.6

Our principles are ideas that work, individual responsibility, strong local communities,

1:33.2

and belief in the American dream.

1:35.2

As a former college professor and current president of the Heritage Foundation, my life's

1:39.2

mission is to learn, educate, and take action.

...

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