25 Years After ‘The Perfect Storm’, New England’s Fishing Industry Faces a Different Kind of Reckoning

As fish stocks slowly recover, tighter regulations, climate change, and corporate consolidation are transforming the once open-access, family-run world of commercial fishing

Share
25 Years After ‘The Perfect Storm’, New England’s Fishing Industry Faces a Different Kind of Reckoning
Copy

Twenty-five years ago, “The Perfect Storm” roared into movie theaters. The disaster flick, starring George Clooney and Mark Wahlberg, was a riveting, fictionalized account of commercial swordfishing in New England and a crew who went down in a violent storm.

The anniversary of the film’s release, on June 30, 2000, provides an opportunity to reflect on the real-life changes to New England’s commercial fishing industry.

Fishing was once more open to all

In the true story behind the movie, six men lost their lives in late October 1991 when the commercial swordfishing vessel Andrea Gail disappeared in a fierce storm in the North Atlantic as it was headed home to Gloucester, Massachusetts.

At the time, and until very recently, almost all commercial fisheries were open access, meaning there were no restrictions on who could fish.

There were permit requirements and regulations about where, when and how you could fish, but anyone with the means to purchase a boat and associated permits, gear, bait and fuel could enter the fishery. Eight regional councils established under a 1976 federal law to manage fisheries around the U.S. determined how many fish could be harvested prior to the start of each fishing season.

Read more on The Conversation.

Microplastics are all around us, even if we can’t see them. This week, the Possibly team investigates where they come from and why sometimes, they’re even made on purpose
Roughly 500 people have signed up for a monthly survey
Three people are dead and three others are wounded after a shooting at the Dennis M. Lynch arena on Monday afternoon, where hockey players from co-operative teams representing several R.I. high schools had a game scheduled.
The mother and adult son were believed to have been living in their car, according to police
Providence, Warwick and New Bedford report rising costs with weeks of winter still ahead