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Chesapeake Crabbers Not Going for Va.'s Buyout

Va. dangles $6.7M to lure watermen out of the Chesapeake Bay crab business, gets few bites

Joe Palmer, owner of Joey's Crab Company, sets out in his skiff for a day of crabbing on Lynnhaven bay in Virginia Beach, Va., Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
(AP)

To ease pressures on the Chesapeake Bay's blue crab population, Virginia is paying watermen to stay out of the water, using $6.7 million in federal disaster aid to buy back crabbing licenses.

Many longtime crabbers won't take the bait, though, preferring a backbreaking job with dwindling returns to no job at all.

"I like being outside, and I just absolutely love catching things — absolutely love it," said waterman Joe Palmer, who works in drenching rain and searing sun to yank up traps laden with skittering blue crabs.

Palmer, 54, illustrates the challenge fisheries managers face in Virginia and Maryland as they attempt to thin a bloated fleet of watermen that harvests the sweet-flavored shellfish synonymous with the bay. Veteran crabbers can't imagine a divorce from a family business that dates back generations.

"They don't want to give up something that's been a way of life for them and their father and probably their grandfather," said Jack Travelstead, a top fisheries manager in Virginia.

Like many fisheries around the world, the Chesapeake simply has too many people working the waters. Watermen today pick at the remnants of a crab population that has declined for nearly two decades because of overfishing, pollution and loss of habitat.

Virginia quit issuing commercial crabbing licenses about a decade ago. Still, the blue crab remains the bay's No. 1 catch with annual dockside sales of $50 million to $80 million.

Regulators in Virginia and Maryland have shortened the crabbing season, created sanctuaries and ended a century-old practice of raking up pregnant hibernating crabs from the bay's bottom, which had a high kill rate.

The effort has reaped results: a winter census of the bay's crab population recorded the highest levels since 1993.

Now the Virginia Marine Resources Commission has set up the buyback program using a reverse auction, in which watermen set a price for the value of the license. Of 1,850 people with commercial licenses, more than 500 crabbers had submitted offers to sell back their licenses by the Nov. 1 deadline with the commission.

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