Aquaculture Lease Forum Gathers State and Local Perspectives
This Article originally appeared in The Lincoln County News. Written by Johnathan Riley
In a special Damariscotta select board meeting held Tuesday, Nov. 21, representatives from surrounding towns, oyster farmers, clam diggers, Maine Department of Marine Resources, and the public voiced concerns and support for aquaculture in local waterways.
According to event host and organizer Tom Anderson, a Damariscotta Select Board member, the forum at Coastal Rivers Conservation Trust in Damariscotta was put together because of the growing dialogue in Lincoln County surrounding aquaculture moratoriums and a need to find a balance in the usage of the local waterways between industry, recreation, and beauty.
“The goal is to understand what a good balance is between a viable oyster farming industry, the safety of our waterways, and just general beauty,” Anderson said. “I think all of those things come into play when we’re trying to work together.”
Earlier this year, Waldoboro and South Bristol voters passed aquaculture lease moratoria, so that ordinances can be developed and studies can be done on affects of aquaculture on the waterways of each town.
However, according to a letter from the Maine Department of Marine Resources, these moratoria, inside Lincoln County and beyond, are not recognized by the state, citing that coastal waters below the intertidal zone are considered public lands within the state’s jurisdiction and not the municipalities.
Amanda Ellis, director of the department of marine resources aquaculture division, said the purpose of her presence at the meeting was to explain the state’s aquaculture leasing process, as well as to learn from the concerns from the people at the meeting.
Ellis said there were parts of the leasing process that may be difficult for municipalities, and the public, to approach and engage with.
“We’re really in a listening mode right now, and one thing we’re hearing from stakeholders is maybe that there are some aspects of the process that aren’t very approachable,” Ellis said. “So we’re taking in that feedback and learning from it.”
Ellis also took the opportunity to dispel some common misunderstandings about the departments function and the implementations of the law, reminding members of the audience the department of marine resources is an extension of the executive branch of government, with power to implement those laws, regulations, and leasing criterion, but posses none to change them.
“Often people talk to us like we’re pro-aquaculture or pro-clammer and put us in this position of trying to take sides, to look like we do, and we’re really not, we are a neutral body,” Ellis said.
State Sen. Cameron Reny, D-Bristol said the Legislative literature review currently in progress by the DMR on the existing body of research, studying the effects soft-shell clams and oysters have on one another, is happening because state legislators are listening to the concerns of residents of Maine’s coastal towns.
Reny also said that in order to change the laws, regulations, and the aquaculture leasing criterion, residents need to work with their legislators, not the department of marine resources.
“(The DMR) can’t use criteria that doesn’t exist or make one, but we can make one, tell us what you want,” Reny said.
According to the DMR website, in order for an aquaculture lease to be approved, it may not reasonably interfere with the ingress and egress of riparian owners, navigation, fishing, or other uses of the area; other aquaculture uses; the ability of the site and surrounding areas to support ecologically significant flora and fauna; or the public use or enjoyment within 1,000 feet of beaches, parks, or docks owned by local, state, or federal governments or certain government-owned conserved land.
Additionally, for standard leases, which are leases up to 100 acres for 20 years, the applicant must demonstrate that there is an available source of organisms to be cultured for the lease site. The lease must not result in unreasonable impact from noise or light at the boundaries of the site, and it must comply with DMR rules to minimize the visual impact.
David Kallin, an attorney with Drummond Woodsum representing Preserve Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation, a nonprofit working on banning industrial scale aquaculture leases from Maine waters, said at the meeting that the letter the DMR put out asserting its jurisdiction was inaccurate, and that the view of the foundation is that there’s room for local regulation.
“Maine is a home rule state, one of the things that’s always been great about Maine is it has the ability to have different local communities make different decisions,” Kallin said.
South Bristol Select Board member Adam Rice advocated for an unbiased overview of the leasing process and commended the aquaculture committee in South Bristol for its efforts in finding common ground.
Waldoboro Town Manager Julie Kiezer said the town of Waldoboro doesn’t want aquaculture leases to populate the Medomak River; something she said could affect the clam population of the river.
“Damariscotta may be the oyster capital of Maine, but we’re the clam capital,” Kiezer said. “We have families that rely on our mudflats.”
Kiezer said that Waldoboro was in a good place to impose a moratorium because the town has so few aquaculture leases on the Medomak River, and that a study on the health of the river could be completed now.
While Waldoboro does not currently have someone lined up to do the study, Keizer said the town is in the process of seeking state funding and finding a faculty member from the University of Maine who would be interested in taking it on.
Glenn Melvin, vice chair of the Waldoboro Shellfish Committee and 40-year clamdigger, said he wasn’t willing to risk hurting the soft-shell clam population the way Damariscotta did when the oyster farmers reintroduced oysters.
“We don’t have any interest in following you or being you, we being Waldoboro,” Melvin said. “You may consider it a success story. We may consider it a disaster.”
Bill Mook, of Mook Sea Farms, who has been farming the Damariscotta River since 1985, spoke to the claims that oysters are killing the soft-shell clams and said the literature review concerning the effects of oysters and soft-shell clams on one another isn’t going to yield results unless the research considers all the environmental factors that come into play, such as increasing acidity and water temperature.
“You’re not going to get an answer about whether oysters are killing all of the soft-shell clams unless you understand how these species are being affected by all these environmental changes,” Mook said.
Mook provided anecdotal evidence about the lack of effect oysters have soft-shell clams, and said when clam larvae are in the water, they set all over the oysters, forming byssal threads the way mussels do, and if oysters were bad for soft-shell clams, its larvae wouldn’t be doing that.
“If oysters were this black hole that everybody seems to think they are, that wouldn’t happen,” Mook said.
Anderson asked Mook about the effects of the concentration of the oyster farms, citing a statistic from the department of marine resources that said 163 acres of the Damariscotta River has oyster cages on its surface.
Mook said that number was misleading when talking about concentration of oysters and the cited acreage was for the total space of all aquaculture leases on the river and not surface area covered by oyster cages. Were the approximately 7,000 oyster cages on the river condensed, Mook said it would only cover about three and a half acres.
“One hundred and sixty acres of coastal waters are being leased, but the actual gear is occupying a very small fraction,” Mook said.
Anderson closed the meeting thanking all those who attended and said he felt the meeting was constructive and helpful, and that dialogue is always a positive activity to engage in.
“We’re sharing information and we’re getting answers and I think we came up with a couple of suggestions the DMR might take into consideration as well as our legislators,” Anderson said. “I thought everyone was professional tonight and I appreciate it.”
Lincoln County Television filmed the forum, which is available for viewing at lctv.org.
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Bivalves in Brunswick
Last summer, an algae bloom cost clammers hundreds of thousands of dollars in Maquoit Bay in Brunswick.
Residents are asking questions about the largest industrial aquaculture lease in Cumberland County involving the 34 acre Mere Point Oyster lease. Residents have turned in over 100 signatures to the town council requesting testing specifically around the industrial aquaculture site to confirm if it is or is not part of what caused the bloom. You would think that any oyster company would be eager and willing to test the area around their site.
Residents have taken their concerns to Brunswick town hall. They attend council meetings and have met separately with the town manager. It is clear this continues to be an uphill battle.
The request for proposal (RFP) regarding water quality testing has not a single word in it about aquaculture. After citizens refused to give up, a meeting on Wednesday forced the issue back to the table on the RFP.
The pictures below show what is washing up on the shores.
We will continue our work to protect the environment and ensure that everyone can work, enjoy, and make a living along the coast of Maine.
We can’t do this work without your support. Please consider donating this week.
46 escaped aquaculture salmon found in New Brunswick river
August 2023 Update
A quick update from Protect Maine’s Fishing Heritage Foundation
Industrial scale salmon farming
This video from Tasmania was just released and is a good example of what is happening worldwide as people learn more about industrial scale fin fish farming. The video is dramatic and shows the spinal deformities and feces that come from industrial scale farming.
As you may recall, Argentina has banned net pen salmon. In Washington State, net pen salmon is in the crosshairs. But in Maine, we are recruiting salmon aquaculture , one of the dirtiest polluters, to our waters.
Maine - Open for pollution
In Maine, we have little access to information about what is going on at the net pen salmon farms. Protect Maine has stated before, Maine did away with its dive program underneath the salmon pens more than 2 decades ago. Maine relies on the corporate owner of the farm to video tape what is happening beneath the surface. But even after 116,000 fish died at Cooke’s pens off Swans Island regulators were unwilling to look at the environmental impacts. According to emails from DMR and DEP fish were taken to a composting pile in Tremont.
The picture paints a story about the aftermath. But hidden below the surface is the immediate impact of that kind of die off from the salmon farm and an unwillingness to look at it.
The below was obtained through a Freedom of Access Act request:
August 30, 2021: Department of Marine Resources (DMR): “Is there a plan to conduct a dive?”
August 30, 2021 : Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) :“No.”
August 30, 2021: DMR “Cooke is not collecting videos for us at this time. Although we have the authority to ask for videos…should we start collecting that information and potentially having to then take action.”
The state eventually did dive underneath the pens - two months after the die off. The state reported the environment good - and renewed Cooke’s lease for 20 years.
Cooke’s net pen aquaculture operation in Washington state is under fire and going through legal appeals after regulators began the process of shutting it down. Cooke leases more than 600 acres of pens in downeast Maine. As states and entire countries ban salmon aquaculture polluters, Maine has made itself a target for net pen salmon with weak regulations and even weaker enforcement. We are creating our own nightmare in our oceans.
Other issues largely unknown
In January of this year Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISA) was detected in the pens at Southbay in Cobscook bay in Downeast Maine. A ship was dispatched from headquarters in Canada to empty the pens. ISA can be harmful if fish escape into the wild population. This is one of the Cooke salmon pen sites.
Earlier this month, seals breached Cooke’s salmon net pens leading to more farmed fish escapes into the wild.
Bivalves
Last summer an algae bloom cost clammers hundreds of thousands of dollars in Maquoit Bay in Brunswick.
Residents are asking questions about the largest industrial aquaculture lease in Cumberland County involving the 34 acre Mere Point Oyster lease. Residents have turned in over 100 signatures to the town council requesting testing specifically around the industrial aquaculture site to confirm if it is or is not part of what caused the bloom. You would think that any oyster company would be eager and willing to test the area around their site.
Residents have taken their concerns to Brunswick town hall. They attend council meetings and have met separately with the town manager. It is clear this continues to be an uphill battle.
The request for proposal (RFP) regarding water quality testing has not a single word in it about aquaculture. After citizens refused to give up, a meeting on Wednesday forced the issue back to the table on the RFP.
The pictures below show what is washing up on the shores.
We will continue our work to protect the environment and ensure that everyone can work, enjoy, and make a living along the coast of Maine.
We can’t do this work without your support. Please consider donating this week.