June 11, 2004
BFC forges ahead with
training program
Coalition "working
through" its issues, CEO says
JIM
BELL
The CEO of the Baffin Fisheries
Coalition, Jerry Ward, says he will proceed with a planned training program
this week, as the company's 11 members "work through" issues that
have threatened to torpedo its long-term plan to build a Nunavut-controlled
fishery.
This week, 12 Inuit from
the Baffin region started a training course in Iqaluit aimed at preparing them
for entry-level jobs on the fishing trawlers that the BFC will charter this
year to catch its 4,000-metric-tonne turbot quota in northern Davis Strait.
Ward says this training
program, and a similar one planned for later in the summer that will train 12
more people, represents the kind of benefit that can be gained if BFC members
stick together and use their combined strength.
The BFC, with help from
the Kakivak Association and the GN's Department of the Environment, is paying
for the courses.
Participants will take
an "MED" or "marine emergency duty" course, and a pre-sea
trawler course.
Ward says that under Transport
Canada rules, crew members aren't allowed to work on trawlers until after they
take such courses.
"You have to know
how to get in and out of the water, and what happens if the boat sinks, and
all those types of things. They have to do this (MED) course to get on the boats,"
Ward said.
The pre-sea trawler course
teaches participants how to mend nets, do repairs, and other basic skills required
for work on deep-sea factory-freezer trawlers.
Ward said, however, that
these courses are just a start. He said the BFC wants to move its Inuit trainees
into higher-level courses, to prepare them for future management-level positions.
The courses are popular.
Ward says the BFC chose their 12 trainees from 110 applicants.
These courses are important
to the BFC too, Ward said, because they will help the organization meet a minimum
target of 50 per cent Inuit employment on the two trawlers they've chartered
to fish their quota this year.
That means the BFC will
need to develop a pool of between 30 and 40 Inuit crew members this year and
next.
As for the "Six-Eleven"
proposal that made some HTO members fear they will lose revenue from separate
pieces of turbot quota they hold in southern Davis Strait, or division "0B,"
Ward says those fears are based on a misunderstanding.
He said that under the
proposal, the BFC, rather than southern operators like Clearwater, would catch
their OB allocations for them, but that the affected members would still retain
their royalty revenues - and possibly get a better price from the BFC.
Some members, including
the Nativak hunters and trappers organization in Qikiqtarjuaq, have threatened
to leave the BFC if they don't see more benefits for their communities.
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