Peace everyone,


I hope everyone has been able to have strong community around them in these times. There's a lot going on and it's easy to feel overwhelmed, but holding reality together with mutual care of loved ones makes it all the more manageable.  


If you remember from last month we talked about our board retreat in Savannah and our amazing new board members! But one thing that wasn't mentioned (unless you've been checking out our social media!) was the Leadership Gathering we hosted just before the retreat. For this 2-day gathering, we invited a small group of Black and Native fisherpeople together to share space, connect, and collaboratively vision the world we are striving for. 


Every year there are many events that bring people together for particular purposes and particular skillsharing or some other, often great, reason. Every now and then though, it's crucial to take a moment to pause and ground in our hopes for the future, and doing so with folks who are most deeply tied to the need for that hope is important. 


Anyone struggling to create community-based systems to feed their people is fighting an uphill fight and is deserving of so much love and respect. However, for Black and Native folks, they are particularly targeted through so many methods and systems that seek to destroy and erase any circles of people in this struggle for community care. 

It's incredibly powerful to share the stories of the resilience needed in the face of powers seeking to dismantle, but there's a different energy in a space when everyone in the room is already grounded in that reality. Experiencing the emotions as folks came to realize how much power they themselves truly have and realize how much power we could be building together was an experience I'm not going to be forgetting anytime soon. This gathering also will not be the last of this kind, there are so many other incredible Black or Indigenous leaders in our circles we didn't get to connect with this past April. 


As a Black man, a mantra that has always been a simple, grounding reminder of hope is 'We still here.' A simple nod to the immense strength of Africans to survive through this history that has constantly tried to own us and erase us if we don't comply. Being in spaces like this leadership gathering for me was not only a reminder that 'We still here,' but the fire of care and love that has gotten here is alive and well and burning ever bright. 

In so many different directions, there is a lot of reason for hopelessness right now, but I hope these reflections are a snapshot of hope that gives you all the reminder that hope is always one loving neighbor away from you and the only way the struggle ends is if we let it die in our hearts.



In the words of Fred Hampton, Peace to those willing to fight for it, 

Jon Russell

Food Justice Organizer

In This Issue

It’s the Fishers’ Fault?

Atlas for Values Based Aquaculture

Native Farm Bill Coalition: An Interview with Buck Jones

Check Out Our Merch!

It's the Fishers' Fault?

Myth: There are too many boats chasing too few fish. Fewer boats is better for the marine ecosystem. Small and medium-scale fisher’s greed is to blame for the depletion of fish species and the ocean. To solve the problem of too many boats we need to use a “markets-based” approach that treats fisheries access like private property, consolidates the fleet into a few big boats, and secures fish access into the hands of outside investors who will take better care. Also, we still need to feed the world more seafood and because the ocean is so depleted, our best bet is to replace wild-caught fisheries with industrially farmed fish. 


Reality: Corporate consolidation is to blame for the pollution in our oceans and the displacement of fishing communities. Industrial aquaculture and large-scale corporate Wild-caught fisheries have not been scaled appropriately over the years, resulting in massive corporate consolidation, damaged marine ecosystems, the decline of Wild fish stocks, poor water quality, and displaced fishing families. 

Dive Deeper Into This Myth!

Atlas for Values Based Aquaculture

The Don’t Cage Our Oceans crew was in Savannah, GA for the launch meeting of the Atlas for Values Based Aquaculture project. While there, we joined Queen Quet of the Gullah Geechee Nation and the Gullah Geechee Fishing Association to learn about their practices. DCO2 members, Captain Charlie Abner, Colles Stowell, and Carl Wasillie also participated in the gathering. This is the first meeting of a three year long process that will help to synthesize what sustainable and values-based aquaculture really means.


As we uplift and embrace values-based aquaculture, we also continue blocking factory fish farming in federal waters. Check out these recent articles sounding the alarm on industrial fish farms in Florida and New England. The Florida article was penned by Christian Wagley, an organizer with Healthy Gulf, on the heels of our first-ever Don’t Cage Our Oceans members gathering in D.C. this spring. And the New England article quotes NAMA board president Jason Jarvis, and DCO2 legislative director, James Mitchell.

Native Farm Bill Coalition: An Interview with Buck Jones

Buck Jones is a Salmon Marketing Specialist with the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, a Cayuse, and a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. He recently did an interview with the Intertribal Agriculture Council and Native Farm Bill Coalition, reflecting on his past two decades of work with CRITFC. Check it out!

Shop our Swag!

Have you always wanted a NAMA hoodie? Now’s your chance! We’ve got hoodies, aprons, and onesies for the littlest fishes among our movement! Our merch is made in the US by Worx Printing Co-op, a worker-owned union coop and printed with water-based, organic, toxin-free, vegan ink. They’re PVC free, contain no phthalates and are safe for babies!

NAMA is a fishermen-led organization building a broad movement toward healthy fisheries, and fishing communities.

We build deep, and trusting relationships with community based fisherman, crew, fishworkers, and allies to create effective policy, and market strategies.

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