Images (12)
Document
| id |
id
348834463
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 12ARMS Email System
Page 1 of 11
RECORD TYPE: FEDERAL (EXTERNAL MAIL)
CREATOR: [email protected]@INETGEOPMRX
CREATION DATE/TIME:14-DEC-1998 07:21:00.00
SUBJECT: FW: HQ E-clips for 14 December
TO: 'Armstrong, Fulton'
( armstrong_f@A1@CD ) (NSC)
READ: 14-DEC-1998 07:47:29.47
TEXT:
>
Original Message
> From: Devilbiss, Andrew PO
> Sent: Monday, December 14, 1998 7:00 AM
> To: [email protected]; [email protected];
> [email protected]; [email protected];
> [email protected]; [email protected]; lst-Press Clips;
> [email protected]; [email protected];
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject:
HQ E-clips for 14 December
>
> Cod fishermen face foul choices
> Jacksonville wants to put shellfish to work cleaning bay
> U.S. Says Chinese Smuggling Ring Used Tribal Land
> New US courthouse judged too pricey
> Cuban exiles lose test of U.S. resolve
> Out-of-sight ship fire hard to fight
> Coast Guard Picks Boeing Explorer for Armed Helo Tests
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Cod fishermen face foul choices
> To save species, regulators weigh 3 options, all dreaded
> By Scott Allen,
> BOSTON GLOBE
> WAKEFIELD - Fisheries officials said yesterday they will slash cod fishing
> in the Gulf of Maine
> by 80 percent next year in a drastic attempt to restore the species, and
> warned that government
> will have to pick up the pieces of a fishing industry that stands to be
> similarly decimated.
>
> Fishermen predicted that the clampdown on fishing in the Gulf of Maine,
> which includes the
> near-shore waters from northern Massachusetts to eastern Maine, will drive
> many small-boat
> owners out of business because their vessels aren't equipped for fishing
> farther from shore,
> leaving them nowhere to go.
>
> But, faced with a new biological study that found the once-bountiful cod
> population has reached
> a dangerous low, members of the New England Fishery Management Council