Episode 5: Andrew Cremata; How A Bread Route, Big Fish, And A Pandemic Shaped A Small-Town Mayor
Автор: Doug Has Questions
Загружено: 2025-12-25
Просмотров: 41
Описание:
What happens when a saltwater-obsessed kid from Tampa grows up on Cuban bread routes, learns to fish for dinner, and then moves to Alaska to rebuild his life—and ends up mayor? Andrew Cremata sits down with us to trace that winding path and the big ideas it shaped: subsistence vs sport, fisheries and trawlers, faith and persuasion, ferries and bureaucracy, and why access decides whether small towns thrive or fade.
We start with family—Florida heat, a grandmother’s stories from pre‑revolution Cuba, and those early lessons in gratitude pulled from the piers. Andrew contrasts the variety of Gulf fishing with Alaska’s raw abundance, then makes the case that respect for the resource is more than etiquette; it’s policy. He unpacks Florida’s net‑ban recovery as proof that smart limits fuel rebirth, and questions why Alaskans can’t keep a single king salmon while industrial bycatch rages offshore.
The conversation turns inward. Raised in a strict faith and preaching door to door by eight, Andrew learned how to talk to anyone—a skill he later brought to entrepreneurship, writing for Fish Alaska, and finally to public office. He doesn’t preach certainty; he argues for humility, calling money our “modern god” to explain pharma incentives, health theater, and why polarized media eats communities from the edges inward. Then he goes granular: containerizing ore as a hard compromise, rebuilding trust in tourism with caps that match capacity, and treating docks like lifelines, not afterthoughts.
If you care about Alaska ferries, you’ll hear the unvarnished version. Funds promised, studies multiplied, Norway trips taken—and Skagway still stares at a failing float. Andrew’s solution is localist and practical: reclaim control where possible, pair shore power with hydro, and build redundancy before rockslides make the decision for you. Access isn’t a luxury in Southeast; it’s how groceries, healthcare, and winter culture survive.
We close on housing and hope, rejecting buzzwords in favor of math. Real affordability is constrained by build costs, utilities, and land; trusts and incentives help, but only if they match a town’s true goals—seasonal beds, year‑round families, or both. Through it all, Andrew keeps the same compass: respect the fish, talk to your neighbors, plan ten years out, and fight for access.
Enjoy the stories, the candor, and the practical takeaways on fisheries management, small-town leadership, ferry strategy, and sustainable tourism. If this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend who loves Alaska, and leave a review with the moment that hit you hardest.
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