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EXECUTIVE HEARINGS

BEFORE THE

SUBCOMMITTEE ON FISHERIES OF THE

U.S, Congress. House

COMMITTEE ON THE

MERCHANT MARINE AND FISHERIES,
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVESIRE LIBRARY

SEVENTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS

SECOND SESSION

ON

H. Res. 52

CONGRESS

SERU

AUG 5 1944

A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING INVESTIGATION OF THE
NATIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM AS IT RELATES TO
THE COMMITTEE ON THE MERCHANT

MARINE AND FISHERIES

APRIL 4, 7, 12, 13, 14, 19, MAY 5, AND JUNE 26, 1944

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II

SUBCOMMITTEE ON FISHERIES

J. HARDIN PETERSON, Chairman

Mr. O'BRIEN Mr. BRADLEY

Mr. WEICHEL

Mr. HERTER

IRVING G. MCCANN, special assistant to the chairman of the full committee

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Statements of-

Page:

Triggs, Charles W., head, Fish Section, Office of Price Administra-
tion_
3, 125, 134, 216, 228, 241
Hart, Henry M., Jr., associate general counsel for Price, Office of Price
Administration___

9, 11, 23, 203

8, 23, 225

Jacobson, Jerome J., chief counsel, Beef, Small Meats, and Fish Sec-
tion, Office of Price Administration__.

Newton, Edward W., operator, Finest Filleting Co., New Bedford,

Mass

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PRICE CEILINGS ON FISHERIES

TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1944

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,

COMMITTEE ON THE MERCHANT MARINE AND FISHERIES,
SPECIAL SUBCOMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE FISHERIES,

Washington, D. C.

The subcommittee met at 10 a. m., the Honorable J. Hardin Peterson (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.

Present: Representatives Peterson (chairman of the subcommittee) and Bland (chairman of the full committee).

Also present: Irving G. McCann, special assistant to the chairman of the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries.

Mr. PETERSON. The committee will come to order.

I have a short statement here which I will place in the record and which will be available to the press:

Pursuant to House Resolution 281 of the Seventy-seventh Congress, and to House Resolution 52 of the Seventy-eighth Congress, Judge Bland, chairman of the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries of the House of Representatives, has designated me as chairman of the Subcommittee to Investigate Fisheries.

me

The mandate of Congress is couched in general terms and directs

(a) To conduct through studies an investigation of the progress of the national defense program insofar as it relates to matters coming within the jurisdiction of said committee * * * or any other agency under the jurisdiction of said committee, with a view to determining whether such program is being carried forward efficiently, expeditiously, and economically; (b) to make such inquiry as said Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries may consider important or pertinent to the merchant marine or fisheries of the United States, or any of the Territories thereof, or to any matter coming within the jurisdiction of said committee.

Obviously these directives require that this subcommittee should act in the public interest, and that it should seek primarily, through its investigation, to forward the war effort by encouraging the fisheries industry to produce the maximum of seafoods to feed our citizens, our allies, and the distressed or starving peoples who are now or who may become dependent upon our charity.

The demands for increased production, which have been made by Government agencies upon the fisheries industry, have aroused a storm of protest against certain measures and policies of the Government which are alleged to limit the production of all kinds of seafoods. These protests have come from every class of persons engaged in this business. For example, there is unanimity of opinion that the manpower shortage is a serious threat to even normal fish production, and that an appreciation of the importance of the fisheries industry and

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