The Fisheries Broadcast from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador
Summary: CBC Radio's "The Broadcast," as it is affectionately known, since going on the air in 1951, has been dedicated to covering stories about the fishing industry, reflecting the people and the communities that depend on the sea for their livelihood.
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- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2018
Podcasts:
We'll hear from Brad Watkins, the owner of the Atlantic Charger, about the recent rescue of 9 men who had to abandon his boat.
We'll tell you about a company you might know of and what they design for the offshore.
Marystown is poised to become a big player in the aquaculture industry. That could mean a lot of jobs but what about the industry as a whole.
Trans Pacific Partnership? What does it mean for NL seafood? We'll ask some questions of people in the know.
Today we're taking you to a place full of colourful communities and characters, the CBC archives. We're going to Newtown, Bonavista Bay, with Dave Quinton of Land & Sea.
It's got pretty heated today at the FFAW office as fisherman from 3PS crowded the executive board room to address a boat load of issues to their executive.
The Atlantic Salmon Federation recovers two lost satellite tags that made it all the way to Greenland and Ireland.
The ballots were cast weeks ago, now the official count is in. We'll tell you the results in the FFAW-Unifor executive branch election.
The federal government says its looking into taking the oil out of the Manolis L. We'll get reaction from a local advocate who has been fighting for this for years.
Could there be a permanent fix in the works for the Manolis L.? The Coast Guard wants to talk to companies that specialize in marine salvage.
How does a community cope after losing its fish plant? We shine a spotlight on Hant's Harbour, Salvage and Jackson's Arm, where it's not as bad as you might think.
There's more than cod coming over the gunnels in the food fishery, there are sharks too.
Food for thought. We find out what a sustainable fishery and the Rocket Bakery have to do with one another.
DFO says it's had enough with controlling agreements and they're cracking down. We'll hear about their new measures of enforcement put into place and what the FFAW thinks of it.
Lots of changes in the marine environment from warming oceans to historic levels of sea ice. We'll check in to see what's been happening with harp seal numbers as a result of all that.