Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Lubchenco leaving

Jane Lubchenco reportedly will step down in February as head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

NOAA is the parent agency of the National Marine Fisheries Service.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

good riddance... its way past time for her to be gone.

Anonymous said...

Arne! Arne! Arne!

Anonymous said...

Glouster Times reports her as failing to provide documentation of her and senior staffs travel expense records. Time to retire with a fat pension and benefits package. Hopefully the whole fishing quota system will cave in after she is gone.

Anonymous said...

What's the big deal, with a invisible, 22-mile underwater plume of oil ingredients in the Gulf, and the other criminal coverup's related to her offices.

Go Beavers!

Bore Hea said...

Fishermen MUST take a proactive stance on who replaces "Lube Job Jane".
Or just sit back and let them shove another job killing econut up their shaft alley. BH

Anonymous said...

The Boston Whaler Sails?

Touchdown Beavers!~

Truth is tough. It will not break, like a bubble, at a touch; nay, you may kick it about all day like a football, and it will be round and full at evening.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2017537782_noaaboat18m.html

Anonymous said...

A Touchdown and a Field Goal!!
GO DUCKS !!

Anonymous said...

Ducks with a field go? Must not be the Oregon Ducks football team.
But the Oregon women are playing for the national volleyball championship tomorrow. We would love Beaver support.

Anonymous said...

Not looking directly at the crap happening in the commercial fishing waters off the coast of Alaska is a big, bad political blunder.

Anonymous said...

There is enough evidence documented to hell and back on the demise of the King Salmon and it's lack of returns all the way into our neighboring country, Canada.

Hoping it'd go away was not the right approach to an international problem of the century primarily because it's destroying a hundreds year old culture and tradition of two nation's aborigional people - Natives of both Alaska and Canada, where lies the headwaters of the Mighty Yukon River!

It's more than a "big, bad political blunder." It's a crime against humanity to the highest level on earth. To destroy a natural resource that thousands of America's poor people have depended on for hundreds of years is criminal.