Posted on 11/04/2009 7:22:42 PM PST by Vob
"OBAMA DON'T KNOW 'JACK: Fishermen take to the street in FWB to protest amberjack lockdown (UPDATED with PHOTOS) November 03, 2009 10:52 AM Tom McLaughlin and Tina Harbuck
More than 100 fishermen, family and friends showed up Monday morning at the corner of U.S. 98 and Perry Avenue carrying signs in protest of the recent fish closures by the National Marine Fisheries Service.
Its terrible what theyre trying to do to this fishery, said Capt. Kenny Aziz, who bay fishes from his pontoon boat, The Toonpang.
The idea of bringing the Destin charter boat fishermens beef with the federal government to the corner of Perry Avenue and U.S. Highway 98 started out as kind of a joke.
That Fort Walton Beach corner is best known, after all, as a spot where vagrants panhandle for beer money.
We said, Why dont we stand out there with all the homeless folks, since the National Marine Fisheries is going to make us homeless? said boat captain Greg Marler.
FOR MORE PHOTOS FROM THE PROTEST, CLICK HERE.
Monday, about 100 members of the Destin fishing fleet and their supporters did just that. And in doing so, they garnered a lot more attention and support, judging from the horn honking and thumbs up, than the bums theyd run off.
This turned out good, said 74-year-old Olin Marler, Gregs father and a legend on the harbor. We just need this going all around the Gulf Coast and up the Atlantic. We need this on a national level.
Destins charter fishing fleet has been in a fighting mood ever since the Oct. 20 announcement that the National Marine Fisheries Service had decided the time had come to shut down the greater amberjack fishing season.
The closure came during the Destin Fishing Rodeo in a year that the fisheries service had already put severe limitations on red snapper fishing.
An already hard-hit charter fleet felt like it was being kicked while it was down.
I made less all year than I should have made from the fishing rodeo, fishing captain Steve Land said as he stood on the side of the road Monday. For the fishing rodeo I should have done 30 charters. I did eight seven or eight I cant remember, its too scary to think about.
Stories of the woes of Destins fishermen were not hard to come by at Mondays protest gathering. Some talked about selling their boats this winter to make ends meet. Others were planning to borrow heavily and try to hold out for better times in 2010.
Jim Westbrook, who owns New Florida Girl, the longest-running head boat on Destin Harbor, and the charter boat Suzie Q, said hell be laying off nine of his 16 employees this year.
I finished the year with no money in the checkbook, he said.
Land, who said hes gone from fishing to taking tourists to see dolphins, held up a sign that read, Save a fisherman and our fish, uproot a Crabtree.
The Crabtree reference was to Roy Crabtree, regional administrator at the National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Regional Office.
Crabtree has become a focal point for objections the fishermen like to raise about flawed federal fish counts and bureaucrats so far removed from the actual fishing they cant possibly know whats happening beneath the waters they regulate.
Their counting system is so flawed. If theyd jump on a boat with us theyd see how many fish there are out there, Greg Marler said. My dad is 74 years old and he says snapper fishing is better than it has been in years.
Greg Marler, who organized Mondays protest, said what clamor Destins fishermen have been able to raise hasnt done much good to this point.
Weve heard nothing positive from the National Marine Fisheries, he said.
Charlene Ponce, who speaks for the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council, said Monday shed not heard about the Fort Walton Beach protest.
She did say, however, that fishermen across Florida seem to be adopting an attitude.
We have noticed fishermen are becoming more involved and organizing, she said.
Destins fishermen and their friends channeled some of their attitude into creative sign making. Some of those on display Monday included:
Let Them Eat Fish Closures.
Ban the Politicians, not the Fish, and
Obama Dont Know Jack.
A couple of politicians took advantage of the protest to shake hands with some potential voters. Also present were members of the local Tea Party organization, the tyranny response group.
This is what were about, fighting the tyranny of government, said member Don Kreis. These people need jobs. Theres too much government right now.
The NMFS closed the amberjack fishery to recreational fishermen in federal waters on Oct. 24. Earlier in August, federal regulators closed the red snapper fishery.
The fishermen are planning a flotilla Rally for Recreational Anglers this Saturday in Destin harbor beginning at 10 a.m., also in protes
vob
gotta love a boat names the “Toonpang”!
They all need to band together, ignore it and go fishin’.
They’ll probably send the Coast Guard out to enforce it and just ignore them too.
Let em arrest all of em or, better yet, fire upon an unarmed American fishing boat and sink it. Play it for all its worth in the media and suck obami right into the middle of the fray.
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