Fish Focus

SITUATION FACING NON-EEA WORKERS IN IRISH FISHING INDUSTRY NOT IMPROVED

Situation facing non-EEA workers in Irish fishing industry not improved. The official publication of Experiences of Non-EEA Workers in the Irish Fishing Industry by Maynooth University Department of Law is confirmation that the situation facing non-European migrant fishers, both documented and undocumented, has not fundamentally improved, and if anything has worsened, in the course of the last five years since the Atypical Work Permit Scheme was introduced.

The ITF contributed to the funding and logistics of the research to support researchers to speak with migrant fishers and ex-migrant fishers.

The ITF contributed to the funding and logistics of the research to support researchers to speak with migrant fishers and ex-migrant fishers.

Michael O’Brien, Fisheries Campaign Lead in Ireland for the ITF said:

“The instances of gross overwork, underpayment and abuse cited in the research coupled with a prevailing precarity in terms of migration status which facilitates this very exploitation can only lead to the conclusion that the Atypical Work Permit Scheme as its constituted is very much part of the problem. I note yesterday’s statement from Minister for State Browne that the scheme will be reviewed again and the points of the Maynooth research will be taken into consideration.”

“The scheme ties the fisher to the individual boat owner in yearly renewable contracts. The power the employer has over the fisher is immense and the dominant sentiment among fishers is that they must endure working days of up to 20 hours and an effective pay rate well below the legal minimum wage in order to safeguard their livelihood.”

“The situation for the many undocumented migrant fishers is more vulnerable again. The hundreds of detections made by the Workplace Relations Commission and Marine Survey Office of various non-compliances on the part of boat owners related to their employment of documented and undocumented migrant fishers have not resulted in dissuasive penalties. This feeds a culture of impunity and repeat offending within the vessel owner community.”

“We endorse the recommendations contained in the Maynooth report. Through various measures the migrant fishers have to be liberated from the exclusive relationship they are forced into with individual boat owners. The impending migrant documentation scheme to be finalised by the Department of Justice, if it is sufficiently inclusive, could be the most direct means to achieve this. However, there are worrying indications that the scheme will be restrictive and contain anomalies that will serve to exclude most migrant fishers notwithstanding Minister for State Jim Browne’s statement yesterday to the effect that the scheme will offer a path to documentation for many fishers.”

“Significant legal and operational changes are required on the part of the Workplace Relations Commission so that we in the ITF, and others in the trade union movement, can take cases on behalf of undocumented workers for unpaid wages and also achieve full wage recovery beyond the current six-month backdated limit as migrant fishers unfortunately often endure underpayment at the hands of some vessel owners for periods spanning years.”

“Lastly, we need the government to correct its botched transposition of the EU’s Working Time at Sea Directive so that a remedy is available to migrant fishers for the common cases of overwork described in the report,” said the ITF’s O’Brien.

Upcoming initiatives from the ITF to address issues raised in the Maynooth research

Following on from the Maynooth the ITF fisheries campaign can confirm the following initiatives: