In an Anchorage Daily News opinion piece, three community development quota executives tout the value of the CDQ program and the pollock fishery that underpins it.
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
I don't get it. What's the point of these CDQ executives tooting their own horn? It gives off a bad aroma. Who is their audience? Everybody already knows how deeply and politically conflicted CDQ groups are these days in the Alaska seafood industry. Best to just carry on, do good work, stay quiet, and invest our time and energy in doing what we must to put up the best quality seafood possible.
One of these esteemed executives just gave Rodger May first right of refusal for sales of their substantial Bering Sea crab products. There is not a less deserving person after what he did to Peter Pan and the city of King Cove.
2 comments:
I don't get it. What's the point of these CDQ executives tooting their own horn? It gives off a bad aroma. Who is their audience? Everybody already knows how deeply and politically conflicted CDQ groups are these days in the Alaska seafood industry. Best to just carry on, do good work, stay quiet, and invest our time and energy in doing what we must to put up the best quality seafood possible.
One of these esteemed executives just gave Rodger May first right of refusal for sales of their substantial Bering Sea crab products. There is not a less deserving person after what he did to Peter Pan and the city of King Cove.
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