The Department of Environmental Protection (Department) will conduct a Public Meeting on October 28, 2021 from 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM via Zoom
MANY QUESTIONS UNANSWERED FOLLOWING DEP STATEMENT ON FISH DIE-OFF AT BLACK ISLAND
Protect Maine’s Fishing Heritage Executive Director Crystal Canney said, “So the obvious question is – what killed the fish? You won’t find answers in the statement issued today, and we are still waiting to hear from the Department of Marine Resources (DMR), the primary regulating agency on net pen salmon. DMR was very quick to say that it was a dissolved oxygen issue, but the DEP has already ruled that out in its statement today.”
Maine DEP looking into salmon die-off at Black Island farm
“Maine has set the table to bring industrial scale and environmentally polluting large scale industrial aquaculture to the state and it’s wrong,” Canney said. “If DMR cannot manage Black Island, how in God’s name are they going to be able to manage a foreign corporation coming in here with big money, with the potential to expand to 1000 acres.”
Salmon 'die-off' incident raises concerns about the state's future in large-scale aquaculture
Atlantic Right Whales On The Ropes: Is Lobstering The Problem?
“This is incredulous,” says Crystal Canney, executive director of Protect Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation (PMFHF). “The whale deaths are not in Maine at the hands of Maine lobstermen…instead of saving right whales, what this decision has done is endanger not only the livelihoods of many of our lobstermen and women but also their lives,” she adds.
HUGE SALMON DIE-OFF NEAR MDI LEAVES MANY UNANSWERED QUESTIONS
A massive die-off of farm raised salmon, in pens off Black Island in late August, has prompted a series of questions to state regulators, from groups concerned about the impact of industrial-scale aquaculture on coastal Maine waters. Black Island is a few miles south of Bass Harbor on Mount Desert Island.
Cooke Aquaculture Die-Off FOAA Documents
September Newsletter - Updates from PMFHF: Protest Flotilla & Salmon Die-Off
Letter to DMR Regarding Cooke Aquaculture
Dear Commissioner Keliher:
Our groups represent a considerable number of lobstermen, other fishermen, recreational boaters, and those who live and work along the water both year-round and seasonally. We understand that there was a large die-off of farm raised salmon at the Cooke Aquaculture project off Black Island recently and have many questions that we feel need to be addressed. We remain concerned about DMR’s approval and monitoring process for leases within the state.
BDN Editorial: Right Whales, Wrong Rules
Federal fisheries regulators on Tuesday announced new rules for the northeast lobster industry. The rules, which are aimed at protecting endangered North Atlantic right whales, are more stringent and extensive than lobstermen and state officials had expected.