LD 1146: An Act To Protect Maine's Ocean Waters and Support Regulatory Oversight and the Long-term Health of the Aquaculture Industry

This bill is a concept draft pursuant to Joint Rule 208.

This bill proposes to amend the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 12, chapter 605 and Title 38, chapter 3 to protect Maine’s ocean waters, support robust regulatory oversight and the long-term health of the aquaculture industry and advance the interests of the people of the State.

From The New Yorker: Fish Farming Is Feeding the Globe. What’s the Cost for Locals?

By Ian Urbina, originally published in The New Yorker

Gunjur, a town of some fifteen thousand people, sits on the Atlantic coastline of southern Gambia, the smallest country in mainland Africa. In the spring of 2017, the town’s white-sand beaches were full of activity. Fishermen steered long, vibrantly painted wooden canoes, known as pirogues, toward the shore, where they transferred their still-fluttering catch to women waiting at the water’s edge. The fish were hauled off to nearby open-air markets in rusty metal wheelbarrows or in baskets balanced on heads. Small boys played soccer as tourists watched from lounge chairs. At nightfall, the beach was dotted with bonfires. There were drumming and kora lessons; men with oiled chests grappled in traditional wrestling matches.

Maine’s waters must be protected

Originally published in the Ellsworth American

By Keith Kennedy

Protect Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation (PMFHF) stands firmly in its support of Maine’s heritage fisheries and small aquaculturists along Maine’s treasured coast. PMFHF is a relatively young nonprofit and has supported legislation that will protect Maine’s waters. Our philanthropy recently worked to raise money to provide COVID relief to lobstermen. Our board is comprised of longtime lobstermen and concerned citizens. Our membership is expanding beyond the lobstering community to people who recreate along the coast and small aquaculturists who are concerned with what is happening with regard to the recent increased number of proposed and approved larger and inappropriately sited aquaculture farms.

Maine fishermen caught in a quandary over offshore wind-array site

From MaineBiz

The state of Maine is asking fishermen to help site a proposed offshore wind turbine array that the industry largely opposes.

“We know the industry has emphasized that nowhere is a good place for this. We hear that loud and clear,” Meredith Mendelson, deputy commissioner of the Department of Marine Resources, said at a virtual meeting Wednesday to discuss the array's potential location off the southern Maine coast.

Norwegian firm seeks state approval to put salmon farm off MDI

From the Bangor Daily News

Crystal Canney, head of a group called Protect Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation, said that the group, along with traditional fishermen and small-scale aquaculture growers, is concerned that such a large “industrialized” project would have “a tremendous impact on the Maine coast and the lobster industry.”

Salmon farm sparks opposition

Originally Published in the Ellsworth American, 2/3/2021

GOULDSBORO — Opposition is mounting to a large-scale salmon farm in Frenchman Bay before the project’s backers have formally submitted an application to locate roughly 30 net pens at two sites north of Bald Rock and the Hop islands.

In a related move, a citizens group is calling for the Maine Department of Marine Resources to toughen its rules regarding aquaculture leases that range widely from mussel to oyster cultivation in coastal Maine. Applications for these enterprises have jumped threefold in just five years.