Payments leave some
fishermen short
By Susan Chambers,
Staff Writer
August 22, 2006
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World Photo by Madeline Steege A
small commercial fishing vessel
ties up to the dock to use the
public hoist in Charleston
recently. Owners of many local
salmon trollers are upset that
some fishermen got bigger checks
from the state than other
fishermen received and they
argue that the distribution of
funds should have been more
equitable.
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CHARLESTON -
Fishermen's concerns about balance
in the distribution of state
financial aid came to fruition over
the weekend, as checks began showing
up in mailboxes.
Salmon trollers left without any
real season this year were hoping
for state money to help pay bills
until federal money - if it comes
through - will be made available.
But for some, that didn't happen.
Some who fish solely for salmon
received only a couple hundred
dollars or so. Others who receive
income from sources other than
fishing received more than $1,000.
Some fishermen
received $7,500 - a staggering
amount to most of the fleet, who
assumed that everyone would get
about $1,600.
“This is not the outcome we had
hoped for,” Oregon Salmon Commission
Administrator Nancy Fitzpatrick said
Tuesday.
Port Orford fisherman Chris Aiello,
whose check amounted to roughly
$100, put it much more plainly:
“It's insulting,” he said.
Once an initial $500,000 was made
available from the governor's
strategic reserve fund and approved
by the Legislative Emergency Board
in June, state agencies began
working on a plan to make sure the
money would get to those who needed
it most, according to specific
directions from the board.
The Oregon Department of Agriculture
and a review committee of people
familiar with the fishing industry
were tasked to compile the
applications and sort out the
neediest folks.
It was a monumental task. Just the
deliveries reported by fishermen
varied from $200 to more than
$100,000, said ODA Assistant
Director Dalton Hobbs.
“Given the enormous range of the
requests, the statements of need Š
it became difficult to determine
something that would please
everyone,” said Jay Rasmussen, an
Oregon Sea Grant extension agent and
a member of the review committee. “I
thought that the Department of
Agriculture took their role very
responsibly and very seriously.”
That doesn't sit
well with Jim Allen. The troller
from Pacific City makes 90 percent
of his income from salmon, he said,
and the other 10 percent from
working on dory boats that fish out
of Pacific City.
His check was about $200.
“I'm not very happy at all,” he
said, noting that another fisherman
who gets most of his income from
non-fishing work got more than
$1,000.
The principle behind the detailed
application process was flawed from
the beginning, fishermen say.
Knowing there wouldn't be much of a
season this year, many of them put
off repairs or spending money on
their vessels. And putting off those
repairs for another year just
increases the need for more
maintenance the following year.
Yet it was those very receipts that
were required to be submitted with
the application to the Department of
Agriculture, on which the department
based part of its funding decision.
“Salmon fishermen that had above a
certain percentage of their income
from salmon got a certain percentage
of their receipts, up to $7,500,”
Hobbs said.
Below that, it was a sliding scale,
he said.
“Most of the fleet's thankful, but
due to information obtained by
people trained by the state to fill
out the applications, most people
didn't include enough valid receipts
to get the bigger checks,” salmon
commission member Jeff Reeves said.
Deciding on dividing
When the fleet first heard about the
$500,000 being made available,
salmon commissioners met to discuss
what the fleet thought would be the
best way to divvy it up.
Equally, fishermen said, and keep it
simple: If you fished, you should
get some of the money. Under the
commission's plan, a minimum amount
of landings would show whether a
troller really fished or whether he
fished just as a hobby.
But the state has to answer to
legislators, Hobbs said, and things
aren't always that simple,
especially when it comes to using
public money. The state is
accountable to legislators and the
public for distributing those
dollars.
“There are stringent and tight
controls on how these dollars from
the reserve fund can be used,” said
Hobbs. “It needs to be used to
ensure jobs and that an industry is
preserved.”
Still, that doesn't convince many
trollers.
“It's obvious that, although there
was an admirable effort to
distribute these funds, the (state)
took no guidance from industry,”
Bandon troller Scott Cook said.
The process
One of the main questions from
fishermen, though, is why the $7,500
upper cap?
The review committee came up with
that number, Hobbs said, based on a
combination of salmon landings,
receipts submitted and a fisherman's
percentage of income from salmon.
The committee determined that it
didn't want any single fisherman to
get more than 2 percent of the
$500,000, Hobbs said, which would
equal $10,000.
But at least six fishermen got
$7,500, at least one in Charleston
got $7,300, and another local
troller got $5,000 - the total of
which represents about 11 percent of
the money available.
The review committee - made up of
Rasmussen, from Sea Grant, state
legislators, one county commissioner
and representatives from several
state agencies - met at least twice
after the applications were
returned.
The fleet assumed the committee
would review each application, but
that wasn't the case.
The ODA gathered the applications,
entered the basic landings, receipts
and percentage of income from salmon
into a database, and distributed the
overall data to the committee.
“I did not read every one,”
Rasmussen said. “I randomly looked
at a number of them.”
Rep. Deborah Boone, D-Cannon Beach,
also was on the review committee.
“We had requests for twice as much
money as we had to give out,” she
said, and it was the Department of
Agriculture, not the reviewers, who
set the upper limit of $7,500 and
the lower limit of $75. The
committee approved it, she said,
recognizing that there had to be
some criteria for qualification.
Boone said that she hopes that next
time, if the E-board approves
another $500,000 disbursal of funds
in September, the process will be
much simpler.
Hobbs said that given the
information the state has now, the
next go-round could be very
different.
“It's absolutely critical that the
salmon industry have their voices
heard by the emergency board, by the
coastal caucus, by the state
agencies,” Hobbs said. “We're
interested in hearing from the fleet
Š so that this can be a much better
process.” |