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DECEMBER 2015 Incorporating I N F O R M E D F I S H E R M E N • P R O F I TA B L E F I S H E R I E S • S U S TA I N A B L E F I S H THE 2015 Highliners Committed to their industry John F. Gruver, Puyallup, Wash. Kathy Hansen, Douglas, Alaska Jeremiah O’Brien, Morro Bay, Calif. www.nationalfisherman.com CAROLINA SHINER Tar heels reel back association chief Meet us in Seattle PACIFIC MARINE EXPO ❯ COVER STORY John Gruver’s work for United Catcher Boats has helped significantly reduce king salmon bycatch in the Bering Sea pollock fleet. Elyse Hearns 2015 Highliners JOHN F. GRUVER Fleet fulcrum By Sierra Golden I t’s hard to have a conversation about John Gruver’s work without someone immediately touting some version of this aphorism: “The fisherman of the future will be judged as much by what he doesn’t catch as by what he does catch.” It’s Gruver’s mantra, and in many ways it exemplifies his 40-year career as a visionary leader in the Bering Sea pollock fishery. Before anyone else, Gruver looked for effective, creative and sustainable ways to reduce bycatch in the pollock fishery and ensure that it stayed economically viable. “I really tried to create awareness [around bycatch issues] because I felt like they could be hot button political issues down the road,” Gruver says. “And they were. And they are.” Gruver first fished in 1974 onboard the seiner Bessie B in Southeast Alaska to pay for college. After just a couple summers fishing though, Gruver realized he liked it, GRUVER, continued on page 26 24 NATIONAL FISHERMAN KATHY HANSEN Southeast stabilizer By Charlie Ess A sking Kathy Hansen to make the correlation between the name of her first boat, the Steadfast and her character as a fisherman and industry leader is to ask for a lesson in humility. Hansen, 55, of Douglas, Alaska, quickly defers to her husband, Ed, as an equal counterpart in all of her endeavors, on the water and off, but admits that she knows when to step up and lead. “It’s all totally ‘we,’” she says of Ed’s involvement with every facet of her life. And she’s equally quick to point out that an air of objectivity and respect for other points of view go a long way in the evolution of fisheries. Hansen is executive director and founder of the Southeast Alaska Fishermen’s Alliance — a multigear, multispecies industry association that represents more than 300 members — in 2000. When she’s not answering phones, cranking out memos and emails to various state and federal governmental agencies in advocacy of fishermen or the fish they catch — being voice for many via to the Alaska Board of Fisheries, North Pacific Fishery Management Council, International Pacific Halibut Commission and United Fisherman of Alaska, to name just a few — HANSEN, continued on page 28 To subscribe, call 1-800-959-5073 JEREMIAH O’BRIEN Harbor hero By Nick Rahaim I n the late 1970s, Jeremiah O’Brien left New England to chase snow in the American West. He landed in Morro Bay, Calif., in 1980. Life as a ski bum left him with little reserves, so he headed to the docks and landed a fishing job. “The fishing life hooked me,” said O’Brien, now 68, just after returning from a few months of chasing albacore tuna up the Pacific Coast into Canadian waters. “I guess you can say the rest is history.” Over the past 35 years, O’Brien has fished everything from shark and sea bass to halibut and swordfish along with diving for abalone and urchins. “I was lucky to have worked with some very good fishermen early on,” O’Brien said. “I learned a lot from them.” His current boat is the 48.8-foot Aguero, powered by a supercharged V-6 Detroit Diesel Series 71. The steel Monk-designed Aguero was built in Fort Bragg in 1972, and O’Brien purchased it in 1997. Since he bought the O’BRIEN, continued on page 30 NATIONAL FISHERMAN 25 Lorrin French Jeremiah O’Brien has fished many West Coast species and gear types out of Morro Bay, Calif., and led his local association for 10 years. Ed Hansen Kathy Hansen has fished in many fisheries over four decades, including trolling for kings on the Ocean Gold. She also advocates for hundreds of fishermen through the Southeast Alaska Fishermen’s Alliance. ❯ COVER STORY John Gruver helped to develop the salmon excluder that provides up to 50 percent king salmon escapement. time and is now the and he began “fishing more and going norm.” It was also to school less.” To scratch the itch, he the first of many bought a Puget Sound gillnetter in 1979. occasions in which The venture was a bust, but it taught Gruver would foreGruver an important lesson that would see and advocate guide him well later in life: Fishing is for the sustainable about much more than catching fish. Though Gruver Gruver was the enjoyed fishing in first fisherman I Southeast Alaska and Puget Sound, recall to advocate bigger seas called him, and in 1981 he for management fished his first seafuture of his son for pollock, cod fishery. Given measures that gave and crab in Shelikof the taxing Strait. Gruver says physical work fishermen the authority of pollock he struggled for a year or so when he and the and tools to co-manage fishing began these new complexity of fisheries, but evencreating new their fishery. tually he found the regulations, it’s — Brent Paine, hard to believe perfect fit: the Sea Wolf, a 123-foot UNITED CATCHER BOATS that he purMarco crabber consued this adverted into a trawler for pollock fishing. vocacy work while also running the Sea Gruver started on deck but worked his Wolf. way to the wheelhouse in 1986 and part Gruver, though, was always thinking ownership in 1987. beyond himself.“While many of the boat Gruver’s strong leadership skills were owners were focusing on their individual evident in the way he fished. Fellow fishing operations, Gruver worked on fishermen describe him as “extremely the development of fleet-wide voluntary competitive,” and 2009 Highliner Award programs to help all the boat owners and winner Kevin Ganley calls him “a cham- captains and crew,” Paine says. In 1993 pion to fish around.” But Gruver didn’t Gruver became the founding president forget the lesson he learned a few years of United Catcher Boats, the not-forearlier. As a smart boat owner he also got profit trade association that represents involved with fishery politics. the interests of catcher vessels participatBrent Paine, executive director of ing in the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands, United Catcher Boats, recalls Gruver’s Gulf of Alaska and West Coast trawl fishearly work off the boat: “Gruver was the eries. first fisherman I recall to advocate for Gruver fished and pursued policy management measures that gave fish- work until 1999 when the American ermen the authority and tools to co- Fisheries Act was implemented, and manage their fishery… This was a major the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands poldeparture in fisheries management at the lock catcher-vessels formed a cooperative management organization. Gruver stopped fishing, and UCB hired him as their Catcher-Vessel Intercooperative Manager. Gruver thought his work there would last a few years before it became automatic. Instead, the bycatch issues he had predicted would become hot-button GRUVER, continued from page 24 John Gruver ” Gruver at the helm of the Sea Wolf before he left fishing to devote his full attention to his work at United Catcher Boats. 26 NATIONAL FISHERMAN • DECEMBER 2015 Brent Paine “ topics became more important. Gruver has stayed in the same position with UCB for 15 years continuing his work, mostly on bycatch issues. Almost all of Gruver’s programs required 100 percent consensus to be instituted, and it’s impressive to note that Gruver was the vanguard who fostered cooperation among the highly competitive pollock fleet. Another of the new Highliner’s impressive achievements is designing and developing the current salmon excluder device that is required on all Bering Sea pollock midwater nets. John Gauvin, an independent scientist who helped Gruver develop the excluder, calls Gruver’s idea for the device “unprecedented.” Today, it achieves up to 50 percent escapement for salmon and as little as 1 percent pollock escapement. The project owes its success to Gruver’s hours of AutoCAD — so many that he has been accused of getting a suntan from his computer — countless trips to St. John’s, Newfoundland, to test model nets in a flume tank, and Gruver’s particular ability to draw pollock fishermen, gear manufacturers, flume tank engineers and even a few NGOs into the endeavor. For many it may seem that Gruver’s greatest strength is his visionary sense of the future — the whisper in his ear that told him how fishermen will be judged — but looking deeply at his work, shows that he’s been gifted with not only the ability to envision the future, but also the uncanny skill of drawing people into that vision. As Gauvin says of the salmon excluder, “None of this would have occurred without John [Gruver]’s tireless commitment to make things work, his expertise, and particularly his ability to bring people into the effort.” For updated news, visit www.nationalfisherman.com ❯ COVER STORY Board of Fisheries meeting in Juneau. “I learned a lot by going to one meeting,” she says. She had come to represent gillnetters on a particular issue, but became enamored with information provided to the board from opposing groups. “Every story has many sides,” she says. “So you need to know the other side of the issue.” “Kathy’s a fantastic advocate for the industry. She’s solid, and she’s able to stand her ground politely,” says Linda Behnken, executive director of the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association, in Sitka. Behnken was also a 2009 Highliner Award winner. “She’s a great team player.” Hansen was an instrumental voice as the halibut allocation battle heated up in 2005. “It was actually worked on way before 2005,” says Hansen. “It was a reconsideration by the council of a package that they had voted on back in 20022003. But in 2007, the proposed rule got thrown Signing in at the governor’s out; so we started all mansion with members of the over.” United Fishermen of Alaska. At the time, the Han- HANSEN, continued from page 25 United Fishermen of Alaska you can find her with Ed, drift gillnetting for salmon aboard the Ocean Gold. Hansen was born in Baton Rouge, La., but grew up in Washington’s San Juan Islands when her parents moved northwest in 1970. There she met Ed, a salmon reef netter and gillnetter. The couple married in 1979, and Ed drew her into the fishing lifestyle. Tighter restrictions on Washington fishermen as a result of the Boldt decision led the couple to load their belongings on the Collecting Dungeness crabs in Stephens Passage, Southeast Alaska. “It’s what’s best for the resource, always, but also what works best for the most people. ” 36-foot Steadfast and move north to Alaska in 1985 with their 1-1/2-yearold son. “We upgraded from a wood boat when we bought the Ocean Gold in 1988,” Kathy says. “We’ve been in and out of a lot of fisheries through the years.” The couple has longlined for cod, halibut and rockfish, pulled pots for Dungeness crab, and trolled and gillnetted salmon. At the same time that Hansen accrued savvy on deck, she cultivated an interest in the management of fisheries in the guise of sustaining the resources and maximizing the greatest number of users. A turning point for her came at a 28 NATIONAL FISHERMAN • DECEMBER 2015 sens owned a substantial amount of halibut longline IFQ shares, and the couple opted to sell those out. “When I started getting deep into the halibut charter issues, we actually sold our shares so that I could be objective.” You have to press Hansen hard to find hurdles that would keep her from continuing her steadfast role in improving the health of the fisheries and the people whose livelihoods they sustain. “Character attacks are the hardest,” she says of challenges that have threatened her tenacity. “Sometimes you just want to throw your hands up in the air, but then you’ll get this nice little note... It’s the simple thank yous that keep you moving forward,” she says. Ed Hansen Ed Hansen Gillnetting on the Ocean Gold. — Kathy Hansen While some might argue that an empathetic approach to all sides of an issue in the board’s regulatory process is in essence caving in, Hansen’s objectivity won her seats on panels taking on some of Alaska’s most surly allocation issues. “It’s what’s best for the resource, always,” she says, “but also what works best for the most people.” For updated news, visit www.nationalfisherman.com ❯ COVER STORY “When you think O’BRIEN, continued from page 25 about fishing in Morro Bay, then the next two words that come to mind are ‘Jeremiah O’Brien.’ ” — Andrea Lueker, Morro Bay, Calif. Swordfishing off Morro Bay in 2005. “When you think about fishing in Morro Bay, then the next two words that come to mind are ‘Jeremiah O’Brien,’” said Andrea Lueker, a Morro Bay resident who has known O’Brien for years. “He’s not only in- Jose Cesena boat he has gillnetted for swordfish and shark, including 14 years with his wife, Trudy, as a fishing partner. But he currently sticks to trolling for albacore in the summer, having battled cancer a few times in recent years. “I’m very happy to do what I’m doing,” O’Brien says with a lingering Massachusetts brogue. “Both fishing and in the community.” O’Brien has been instrumental in the fishing community around the central coast of California and beyond. He weathered the lean year of fishing in Morro Bay in the late-1990s and early 2000s, when all processors either closed up shop or left town. He was also at the helm of the Morro Bay Commercial Fishermen’s Organization for a decade from the lows to the fleet’s resurgence in the late-aughts. O’Brien stepped down as president of the organization in 2012, but currently serves as a director. volved in the fishing community but in the larger community as well. He’s a positive force.” O’Brien is also a director of the Morro Bay Community Quota Fund. Through the fund, he has been at the forefront of the fight to protect smallscale fishermen as the market forces in the wake of the catch-share programs have often led to consolidation and have follow the AlaskaTrail Quality Products For Commercial Sports Fishing & Outdoor Netting and THE LARGEST win! When you’re checking out the latest gear at Pacific Marine Expo, November 18-20 in Seattle, “Follow the Alaska Trail” and you’ll be entered to win two tickets from Alaska Air. Commercial Fishing Supply in USA. 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The fund was able to make an unlikely alliance with the Nature Conservancy to allocate “community quota” to the fishermen of Morro Bay below market rate. The not-for-profit fund keeps catch shares and permits in the control of local fishermen. O’Brien was also a director of the Western Fishboat Owners Association, an industry group for the albacore tuna fleet. Over the years he has tried to keep an open dialog with civic organizations like the Rotary Club and other more politically oriented associations to emphasize the importance of a working waterfront to the region. He has also hosted fishermen and fishing advocates in Morro Bay from around the country and the world. 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You have to back words up with something solid,” he said. “Every port should have economic impact reports. It’d make all of us stronger.” It’s unfortunate While O’Brien is in his late 60s and that we have to has faced some health concerns, he doesn’t be involved in plan on quitting fishing anytime soon. It’s politics, but today also likely that even when he ties up his it’s politics that boat for good, he’ll still be the most pasruns the fisheries, sionate advocate of fishermen around the not biology or docks in Morro Bay sustainability. and beyond. “If there is an issue, — Jeremiah O’Brien Jeremiah is usually the first one to take the bull by the horns and schedule meetings with the policy makers,” said Lori French, an active member of the Morro Bay fishing community. “He has always been one of the leaders in fishing activism on our coast.” Joe Conchelos ❯ COVER STORY “ ” Brien fished Jeremiah and Trudy O’ various fisheries. together for 14 years in 48-footer out of his es Now he tak tuna. Morro Bay for albacore Since 1947 Over 80 Sizes and Styles! 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