EDITORIAL
Sometimes, it seems, the little guy really can win. And sometimes,
too, when the little guy wins, it’s a victory for all.
Such is the case in the nearly tragic tale of Newport Beach’s dory
fisherman. For 100 years, in the middle of the night, the fishermen have
pushed off from the beach at the Newport Pier in search of fresh catches
that they then sell right beside the base of the pier. It’s one of the
last remaining parts of the city’s tradition of commercial fishing.
And suddenly it was almost no more.
At the beginning of the month, a federal ruling outlawing the pursuit
of rockfish threatened to end the beloved Newport legacy. But in response
to the outcry from the fishermen, the council that recommended the ban
quickly suggested that a portion of the ban be lifted to let the dories
sail on.
By all accounts, the plight of the fish the ban was meant to protect
is not dire in Southern California waters. And the dory fisherman, while
catching enough to keep business alive, are not reeling in numbers that
threaten to deplete local stocks.
It was, in effect, a matter of a net of regulation being tossed far
too wide.
But, thankfully, the federal regulators seem to have understood their
error. And while the storm is not totally passed for the dory fisherman
-- regulations for 2003 are still being worked out -- they are breathing
easier and expecting a summer of good fishing.
And Newport residents, plus others who come from far off to buy fresh
fish on the Balboa Peninsula, can keep up the century-old habit.
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