[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 154 (2008), Part 18] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 24514-24515] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]``KEVIN STOKESBURY--FRIEND OF THE FISHERMEN'' ______ HON. BARNEY FRANK of massachusetts in the house of representatives Tuesday, December 9, 2008 Mr. FRANK of Massachusetts. Madam Speaker, on the last weekend of September of this year, I was supposed to be at the Fishermen's Festival in New Bedford, an event I always enjoy and which I look forward to attending. Instead, as you know, I was here in Washington, D.C. as we were working to try and put the $700 billion credit system rescue plan into final form. Among the events I missed at that festival was the awarding of the 2008 Friend of the Fishermen Award to Kevin Stokesbury. Dr. Stokesbury chairs the Department of Fisheries Oceanography at SMAST--the extremely important and valuable part of the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, which studies the fishing industry. He received this award from the people in the fishing industry of New Bedford because of the high quality of the work he has done to provide the kind of first-rate scientific information that is so essential to the continued survival of the fishing industry. One of the great successes--probably the greatest success--we have seen in regulation of the fishing industry in New England is with the scallop fishery, and no one is more responsible for this success than Kevin Stokesbury. Madam Speaker, because Kevin Stokesbury's work shows that it is possible to support a thriving fishery in an environmentally responsible way, it is particularly noteworthy that he received this award from the fishing industry of New Bedford--the most important fishing port in America. I ask that the explanation by the fishing industry of this award to Kevin Stokesbury be printed here. Introduction of 2008's ``Friend of the Fishermen'' This year's recipient of ``The Friend of the Fishing Industry Award'' needs no introduction to most of the NB fishing industry, particularly the scallop fishermen. It took him a while to find his way here to us as he seems to have taken a long way around, but he now lives in Westport with his wife Shawna, & four children; Kasey, Tyrez, Taysia, & Henry. Starting with his B.Sc. & M.Sc. both of which he earned at Arcadia University in Nova Scotia, he then received his PhD in Marine Ecology from Universite Laval, Quebec City, Quebec in 1994. He worked as a Research Assistant 1994-1996 at the Center for Marine Science Research at the U. of NC at Wilmington before moving to the U of Alaska Fairbanks, as a Research Assistant from September 1996-1998. Ten years ago in September 1998 he finally found his way here when he joined SMAST at U MASS, Darmouth as an Associate Fellow. In September 2000 he became an Associate Professor. In September 2005 he became the Chair of the Department of Fisheries Oceanography. Do you sense a trend here? In 1999 Kevin conceived a plan to videotape & map the seafloor; the resulting survey would actually count scallops with the intention of determining the size of the biomass. He got together with a few scallop vessel owners & others from the industry, & as they say, ``the rest is history''. Kevin & his associates from his lab at SMAST have probably logged more sea-time than a lot of fishermen over these past 9 or 10 years. They have completed more than 100 video cruises surveying Georges Bank & the Mid-Atlantic fishing grounds; this is more than 600 DAS. Their video library consisting of footage from more than 200,000 video samples has been used in every scallop fisheries management plan since 1999. Today this work has become much more detailed & expansive & it now must be acclaimed as some of the leading environmental work regarding sea floor habitat, & the marine benthic community. [[Page 24515]] Not surprisingly, Kevin's work has not received the same acclaim from many of his peers that it has from the fishing industry & his associates. This unique cooperative research that has existed between the fishing industry, Kevin & SMAST since its inception, has turned much of the ``Old Science'' on its ear, & some did not take kindly to that. Without this `New Science'', it's possible that we still would not be scalloping in the Closed Areas! As Chair of the Department of Fisheries & Oceanography, Kevin's oversight now includes along with scallops; groundfish, lobster & marine environments. Perhaps even more importantly, he is now fostering a new generation of marine scientists & researchers who, if the fishing industry is lucky, will follow the path that Kevin has so brightly blazed! It gives me great pleasure to present ``The Friend of the Fishermen's Award'' to someone I'm proud to call my friend; Dr. Kevin D.E. Stokesbury. ____________________