[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 11 (Monday, January 28, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S323-S325]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FISHERIES DISASTER FUNDING
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, the bill we just passed out of the
Senate, a bill to aid the victims of Superstorm Sandy, is important. It
is important when we are faced with a disaster--whether it is a
hurricane, whether it is an earthquake, whether it is a drought,
whether it is a flood--that we step forward and find those ways that we
can help citizens who have faced immeasurable loss. The effort that has
gone back and forth between two bodies now, and will, hopefully, move
forward, is one which will certainly help to address the needs of those
families who lost so much in Superstorm Sandy.
I think we all recognize this was not the only disaster this country
faced last year. In my State of Alaska we faced a fish disaster. For
those of you who are from States that do not rely on your fisheries as
a source of income, a source of jobs or a source of daily sustenance,
you might think: Fish disasters; well, that is not really much to talk
about. That is not a true disaster.
In my State, when fisheries have declined to the extent we have
seen--the loss of the Chinook salmon on the Yukon River, the Kuskokwim
River, the Upper Cook Inlet--this has a dramatic impact on our State's
economy, a dramatic impact on the livelihoods of so many Alaskans.
Whether they be commercial fishermen, sport fishermen, our subsistence-
based fisheries, our fisheries communities, those businesses that are
dependent on our salmon fisheries, these were all impacted this past
year.
As I had gone around the State, basically from about midsummer
through the end of the year, everywhere I went, whether I was in an
urban center such as Anchorage, Homer, or down in Seward, up in the
Matanuska Valley, or out in the rural parts of the State up along the
Yukon, out along the Kuskokwim out in the southwest, people were
talking about two things: People were talking about our cost of energy
because our energy costs remained the highest in the Nation, but they
were also talking about fish. Pretty basic stuff: fuel, fish, and food.
When we had a disaster this summer, it was an imperative around our
State.
We, in September of this past year, had an official declaration from
the Secretary of Commerce--actually the Acting Secretary of Commerce,
Rebecca Blank--that recognized this fish disaster, and this is a
disaster that is statutorily authorized by section 308 of the
Interjurisdictional Fisheries Act and section 31 of the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.
These are designations that are statutorily authorized. These are not
earmarks. They are not to be labeled as pork or something special for
an area. These are disasters subject to a statutory authorization, a
process that has been clearly laid out. They are authorized in law for
fish failures that require affirmative action from the Secretary of
Commerce. The Secretary has taken that action. Congress then needs to
do its part by funding for these disasters.
I mentioned at the outset that some of my colleagues might not
appreciate the importance of these fish disasters. But, again, these
disasters are no less important than disasters for which we provide for
other industries, such as drought disaster or drought assistance for
our farmers. I think the Acting Secretary, when she signed these
fisheries designations, recognized them for essentially what they are:
fish droughts, fish droughts in our rivers and our oceans. She
responded to the fisheries disasters not only in my State of Alaska,
but she also moved forward with disaster determinations for Rhode
Island, for New York, for Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Connecticut, and Mississippi. The disaster declaration the Acting
Secretary advanced opens the door, then, for the financial assistance
from the Federal Government.
You might notice those funds were not included in this disaster
relief bill. That does not mean I will back down from attempting to do
my best to make sure the disaster that Alaska faced with its fisheries,
and that so many of our other States faced with their fisheries, that
these needs will not be addressed.
We didn't advance it in this package. It is important that the Sandy
provision move forward, and that is why I eventually cast my vote in
support of it. I know many of my colleagues--the Senator from Rhode
Island is with me tonight. I know the Senator from New Hampshire is
very concerned about it. The Senator from Maine is very concerned about
it. I think it is fair to say we will continue our efforts to ensure
the disasters that our fishermen have faced will be addressed as is
statutorily provided in law. We will work to find that funding to make
sure that disasters, however they present themselves in this country--
whether it is storm, flood, drought, hurricane, or earthquake--are
addressed.
I commit to working with my colleagues to continue to find those
sources of funding so we address these revenues.
[[Page S324]]
I note that my colleague from Rhode Island is here, and I know he too
wishes to address this important issue.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I very much appreciate the remarks of
my friend, the Senator from Alaska. This is truly a bipartisan concern.
There are Senators on both sides who feel very aggrieved by what took
place, Senators from Alaska and Maine, on the two sides of the country,
and a great number of us.
The sheet that rests on the front table during the votes to make sure
people coming in know what the current measure is describes the last
vote as passage of H.R. 152, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of
2013--not the Hurricane Sandy Relief Appropriations Act of 2013 but the
Disaster Relief Appropriations Act.
We have had a disaster. We didn't make this up. This wasn't something
that was snuck into the bill or we tried to do an earmark on.
The Governors of Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire,
New York, Connecticut--six Governors petitioned the government for a
fisheries disaster declaration, and they received one. The Secretary of
Commerce declared the New England Multispecies Groundfish Fishery
disaster. The Senator from Alaska described it as a drought.
It is like a drought. What has happened in our waters is that they
have warmed. They have had some chemical changes. Fisheries have moved
northward, and some of them have moved clean out of the U.S.
continental waters. The result is that Georges Bank cod, Yellowtail
flounder, Gulf of Maine cod and haddock have all had to face Draconian
catch reductions to try to keep those species alive.
We have a fishing tradition that goes back even longer than Alaska's,
I will guess. Certainly, we started fishing back in the 17th century,
the 1600s, in Rhode Island. It is a long tradition. But the changes we
are wreaking on this planet are moving the fish around. They are
creating these localized disasters for our fishermen who have worked
hard all their lives, who have invested their life savings into
expensive boats they have to take care of, the maintenance and the
repair, and they risk their health and their lives and their limbs out
at sea in all kinds of weather in order to bring in the catch to us.
When the catch isn't there, it is a disaster.
This is what the Governors have asked for, all six of them. That is
what the U.S. Government, through the Secretary of Commerce, declared.
Why on Earth the fisheries disaster that affects our fishermen doesn't
matter--$150 million; it was not a big piece in a $60 billion bill. Yet
we were left out. We were completely left out.
I will continue to fight to get this done. I think there has been a
wrong committed in this body, and I intend to make sure it gets
righted. I will work hard with the Senator from Alaska. I see the
Senator from New Hampshire, who is equally affected by this, on the
Senate floor. It makes no sense to let people in the House of
Representatives pick and choose among disasters in a bill and strip out
disasters that have been declared by the U.S. Government and the
Governors of six States.
Do they know better? I don't think so. But they took it out. For
whatever reason, we weren't able to get it in back here. I have had
strong conversations with some of the lead supporters of the Sandy bill
and the States that most benefit, with the chairman of the committee
and the floor manager of the bill and with colleagues from nearby
States. This is not over, but I am extremely upset that we would pass
something called a Disaster Relief Appropriations Act and leave out of
it the disaster that has befallen fisheries up and down the east coast,
from Maine down through New Hampshire, through Massachusetts, through
Rhode Island, through Connecticut and New York. That is a pretty wide-
scale disaster.
For the men and the women who go out and put their boats and
themselves at risk for this catch when it is not there, you bet it is a
disaster. It is just as much of a disaster as a farmer who looks out at
parched fields and can't grow what he needs to grow. We are not there
for them, not when it is fishermen, for some reason. We are not there
for them. We have done it over and over. Since 1994 Federal fishery
failures have been declared on 29 different occasions, and nearly $827
million has been appropriated for relief. But not now. For some reason,
not now.
I yield now for the Senator from New Hampshire, who I know feels
strongly about this issue. The Senator from Massachusetts was speaking
with me earlier. She feels very strongly about this, and we need to get
this set right. This is a day for celebration in some quarters but not
in all.
For those of us who have a responsibility to the men and women who
have fished the waters off of our States, this is not an acceptable
result.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I am here to join my colleagues, Senator
Murkowski from Alaska and Senator Whitehouse from Rhode Island, to
express my disappointment and frustration along with them that the
disaster relief funding for our Nation's fishermen has been stripped
from this emergency relief bill. I agree with all of those who want to
make sure the victims of Hurricane Sandy along the east coast get the
help they need. I think that is something to which we all are
committed. But the fact is that fishermen in New England and Alaska and
other parts of this country are also facing hard times. They are
grappling with onerous regulations that are designed to end
overfishing, and in spite of these restrictions, the amount of codfish
in the Gulf of Maine has declined drastically. It has a huge impact on
New Hampshire, and the problem for fishermen in my State is now one of
survival.
Our fishermen have already seen their incomes decrease significantly
in recent years. They depend on cod more than fishermen from any other
State in New England. Cod accounts for more than 90 percent of the
revenues of the fishing industry in New Hampshire. This is because our
fishermen use small day boats, they fish close to shore, and most don't
have the boats or equipment to catch other deep-sea species to
compensate for the lack of cod. Our fishing businesses are small, and
they are mostly owned by families who have been fishing for
generations.
For 400 years, we have been fishing in New Hampshire. Generations of
fishermen in New Hampshire have continued this proud tradition. Yet,
under what is happening with the fishing regulations, we are going to
lose this industry. Our coastline is short in New Hampshire--it is only
18 miles--but the fishing industry is still a crucial driver of the
economy. It generates $106 million in economic activity, it supports
5,000 full-time and part-time jobs in the State, and it provides our
stores and our restaurants with a local and fresh supply of fish, just
as it does in Alaska and Rhode Island. This historic way of life is
going to become extinct if we don't help the fishing industry.
I welcomed the decision of the Secretary of Commerce back in
September to declare a Federal disaster for the Northeast fishing
industry for the upcoming fishing year, but this declaration, as well
as those already provided for Alaska, Mississippi, New Jersey, New
York, Rhode Island, and other States, is meaningless if Congress does
not provide relief funding to these fishing communities.
As my colleagues have said so eloquently, the Senate voted last month
to appropriate $150 million in funding for these disasters, and as
Senator Whitehouse said, it was not a large percentage of the emergency
relief bill. I am disappointed and, like the fisher men and women in
New Hampshire who depend on this industry, frustrated that this funding
has been taken out of the bill we voted on today.
It is critical that we provide relief to the fishermen and to the
coastal economies in New England--and in New Hampshire as a part of the
New England economy--and Mississippi and New Jersey and New York and
Alaska and the other States that are affected. We have to work to
ensure the long-term sustainability of these vital resources and of
this historic way of life. I intend to continue to work with my
colleagues from those States that are affected to make sure the fishing
industry gets the help it needs to survive.
I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
[[Page S325]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. As I heard the compilation from the distinguished
Senator from New Hampshire, it was a pretty small percentage of the
bill, and I was going through the math in my head. If it was a $60
billion bill, with a $150 million appropriation that would have
supported the disaster for the fishermen, I think that is 0.25 percent
of the total of the bill--one-quarter of 1 percent. Yet somebody over
on the House side had to target that and take it out and leave the
fishermen high and dry while the rest all went through?
I think it is really important that we as a group stand for the
fishermen and try to force some recognition in this body that the
disaster they are facing is a real one.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Will the Senator yield?
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Yes.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. It is not just the people who are fishing directly who
are affected by this, it is also all of the other jobs that depend on
that fishing industry that are going to be lost.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. The engine repair people, the net repair people, the
folks who process the fish that are caught, the folks who sell fuel to
the fishermen, the people who do maintenance on the boats--there is an
entire economic ecosystem that is knocked down when the fishermen can't
bring the catch home. Yes, the Senator is absolutely correct.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. And in my small State of New Hampshire, where we only
have 18 miles of coastline, we have 5,000 jobs dependent on this
industry. So in Rhode Island and Alaska, I am sure my colleagues have a
significant number of jobs dependent on the fishing industry. What
happens to those jobs if the industry doesn't survive? They are gone.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. I think Alaska may actually have more coastline than
Rhode Island.
Ms. MURKOWSKI. I think we have 33,000 miles of coastline, not to be
bragging on a coastline. But what is so important as part of this
discussion--and my colleague Senator Shaheen has stated this--our
fishermen often are not included when we think about areas of disaster.
Yet, in terms of those industries, those parts of our economy that are
making things happen as folks are kind of chugging along, it is our
fisheries that for decades--and for centuries, as Senator Whitehouse
noted--have been producing good jobs and providing a source of
sustenance for our families.
Alaska is in somewhat of a unique situation in that we still have so
many families who rely on their fisheries for subsistence. This is not
just an income source for many. For so many in rural Alaska, this means
whether or not you are going to be able to eat this winter. The
situation on the Yukon and on the Kuskokwim--when those rivers were
shut down to fishing, we had actions of civil disobedience, where
individuals just came to the river and said: We have to put our nets in
because we have to be able to feed our families. Down in the Cook Inlet
region, it is not so much a subsistence lifestyle there but a
commercial fishery as well as sport fishing. So sport guides who are
required to be off the river cannot take that tourist who has come to
Alaska for their dream fishing trip. They have to cancel that and lose
their revenue, and so guides can no longer stay in place.
So Senator Shaheen is correct about the ripple effect to the economy.
It affects all of our fishing communities and those who support them.
So when we talk about disasters in areas and $150 million that was to
be split between all of these different regions and States, it is a
recognition that it is quite slight in comparison to the true loss to
our economies, the true loss to our families who have suffered.
Again, I appreciate the commitment we have from so many who have been
impacted that we don't give up on this. We have gone through the
process, we have jumped the hurdles to get the designation that is
required by our government through the Secretary of Commerce. We have
done that. Now the step is for Congress to provide that funding that
makes the difference. It is one thing to get a disaster declaration on
paper; it is another to be able to provide the relief. And I certainly
intend to push until that relief is provided not only for the families
in Alaska but for those who have been impacted by fisheries disasters
throughout the country.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. And I will certainly join my colleague in that effort.
Ms. MURKOWSKI. I thank my colleague.
With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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