Top

news

Stories

 

Fishermen terminal?

Fishers fight the Port's proposal to bring yachts and condos to Fisherman's Terminal.

Destroy it in order to save it. That's the catch of the day at Fisherman's Terminal. The Port of Seattle plans to park yachts next to fishing boats and maybe erect a village of shoreline condos to generate new revenue—a move commercial fishers call the beginning of the end of their historic home port. "If this happens, in 10 years Fisherman's Terminal will become Fisherman's Wharf," says rabble-rousing fisher Pete Knutson, referring to the once-proud San Francisco fish-boat basin now known for its tacky tourist trappings. "Like some of our fish, we can become an endangered species."

The stubble-bearded Knutson—a third-generation fisher who has spent half his 48 years on the seas—flipped on a coffee maker in the cluttered cabin of his 40-foot gillnetter, The Njord, as it rocked gently on sun-dappled Terminal waters the other day. A mop of curly hair swayed from his bandanna headband as he picked up tools and nuts and bolts scattered around the boat—a repair work in progress—then cleared a table for his papers. Out his windows bobbed a mast-filled seascape of some 300 seiners, trollers, and trawlers tethered to the docks and finger piers of Fisherman's Terminal—land and harborage at the southern end of the Ballard bridge that was given to Seattle's commercial fishing fleet by Union Pacific Railroad circa 1913, with the Port as caretaker.

"Caretaker!" spits Knutson. The Port had previously told fishers that the Terminal was losing money, he says. Fishers were therefore surprised to read in new Port documents that revenues were so healthy the Port was actually draining off 5 percent annually to pay for other projects. At the same time, the Terminal's condition deteriorated and now requires a $24 million infrastructure fix.

"We've had rot and broken pilings that weren't repaired," says Knutson, who is heading a group of fishers opposed to the Port's yachting plan. "The loading area along the west wall has been condemned by the fire department and can't even be used."

Today it's the commercial fleet that faces condemnation, Knutson insists. To Seattle—a city with a fish on its official seal—the Port's marina plan will mean the loss of perhaps the last major American inner-city wharf devoted almost exclusively to fishing boats (a few work boats and a historic tour ship also berth there) and the diminishing of a local hallmark industry, the fishers say.

To Knutson and others who regularly brave danger and financial ruin to plumb the icy seas (and are just beginning to recover from an industry price slump), it will mean the upscaling of their historic working wharf—no less calamitous, they say, than if Pike Place Market was turned into a mall. Which, of course, has been tried.

"I've tried to picture it. One day we'll be standing at the Seattle Fisherman's Memorial," Knutson says, referring to the Terminal's towering statue and granite memorial that contains the names of more than 600 local fishers who died at sea (15 more from the recently sunk Arctic Rose will be remembered at a May 6 ceremony), "and you'll look out at these historic waters and see a fleet of . . . yachts. That's sick."

Harbor Development Strategy 21 Committee, an advisory group that reviewed Port operations, recommended the move as part of a new Port financial strategy. The group said "location of yacht brokerages at Fisherman's Terminal and uplands redevelopment concepts" could enhance Port revenue. Port officials say the downsized commercial fish industry doesn't fully use the piers, and welcome the notion of new office and residential buildings nearby.

If waterside condos are the revenue bait, then yacht berths must be the necessary sales hook, say the fishers.

"With yacht moorage to offer, you can obviously sell a condo at a much greater price," says Knutson. "But before they build something that's not related directly to fishing, they have to kind of destroy the concept of the Terminal as a dedicated fishing facility."

That means, adds fellow fisher and plan opponent Bret Barnecut, whose funky, tarp-covered, fire-damaged 76-foot tender is moored near Knutson's boat, "They have to first get rid of the trailer trash—that's us—to fully develop it."

Currently, compared to commercial fishing vessels, pleasure boats have four times the port slip space in local waters. Unlike the fish boats now docked at the openly accessed Terminal piers, where visitors can watch the action up close and hear, Barnecut says, old salts spin "some of the greatest lies, myths, and stories ever told," the yacht piers will be private, with locked entry gates, and require wider berths. The pleasure boats will be located next to the Terminal's dedicated painting and "hot work" (welding) area, posing issues of noise, smell, and conflict.

"They'll start complaining, and we'll have to stop doing this, then that," says Knutson. "Eventually, we could end up with the Fisherman's Terminal Yacht Club."

Port Commission President Clare Nordquist says the idea of making space for pleasure crafts is to create a "short-term revenue enhancement" for the Port, and the commission is expected to finalize the move with a June vote. Officials see it as a done deal, with no call for a full public hearing. However, Allied Arts is sponsoring an open forum on the plan May 9 at the Nordic Heritage Museum, seeking to answer questions about "changes in public access and in the historic character" of the Terminal, says Philip Wohlstetter, Allied's president.

1 | 2 | Next Page >>
 
 

Most Popular Stories


Now Click This

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy