House debates
Thursday, 13 August 2015
Constituency Statements
Hinkler Electorate: Fishing Industry
9:33 am
Keith Pitt (Hinkler, National Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
In August each year the Hervey Bay Seafood Festival attracts about 10,000 people from across Australia. It is the only seafood festival in Australia managed by the men and women who catch it: Australian seafood caught by Australians in Australian waters, processed by Australians, and cooked and served by Australians. You know where it has come from; it is fresh and it is safe. At this year's festival, held just last week, I was joined by Senators Matt Canavan and James McGrath to speak to commercial and recreational fishers. Not only are they concerned about state Labor's proposed net-free fishing zones between Keppel Bay and Fitzroy River, they were anxiously awaiting the results of a review into Commonwealth marine reserves. Prior to our elections in 2013, Senator Canavan and I met with commercial fishers in Hervey Bay who were concerned that the then Labor federal government was planning to lock them out of 1.3 million square kilometres of the Coral Sea. Consultation with the fishing industry was non-existent. Instead, Labor was focused on appeasing the inner-city soy decaf latte-sipping Greens, who have probably never wet a line in their lives, but I bet they have feasted on the spoils of the hard-working fishermen of Queensland. Had Labor been re-elected, their decision would have sent countless family owned businesses broke, cost hundreds of jobs and hurt regional economies. They would have destroyed an industry overnight in much the same fashion as they did with the live cattle trade.
The coalition committed to set aside and review Labor's management plans for the new Commonwealth marine reserves, and just three months after winning government that is exactly what we did. We are working to restore community confidence. The people in my electorate know better than most how important it is for government to strike a sensible balance that protects the environment, supports a sustainable fishing industry, attracts tourism, and provides cultural, recreational and economic benefits for coastal communities.
Hinkler has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country. Seafood and tourism are among our biggest employers. We need a management plan which considers the humpback whales that migrate through Hervey Bay each year, the loggerhead turtles that nest at Mon Repos, the families that make a living catching fresh local seafood, the people who eat it as part of a balanced diet and the tourists who visit the region to fish with their mates. What many Greens do not realise is that the commercial fishermen in my electorate want to protect the marine environment just as much as they do. They have spent their lives at sea. It is their home. They rely on its sustainability for their living. They are the great guardians of our oceans and they are the first ones to know when something has gone wrong.
As part of the independent review, five bioregional advisory panels have held over 170 regional public meetings all over the country this year. The review received over 13,000 written submissions and approximately 1,800 responses to the online survey. The feedback has been collated and is being considered by the panel. I look forward to seeing the recommendations to the government. Striking the right balance will require a proposal that is vastly different to Labor's.