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'They are going to end up in prison' - Knight bemoans unreasonable fines in revised Fisheries Act

Published:Friday | October 12, 2018 | 12:00 AMLivern Barrett/Senior Gleaner Writer
K.D. Knight

Some fisherfolk will end up in prison because they are unable to afford the "unreasonable" fines included in the revised Fisheries Act passed by the Senate yesterday, one opposition senator has warned.

The amended Fisheries Act, which was unanimously passed, repeals the Fishing Industry Act and creates an institutional framework aimed at modernising and better regulating Jamaica's fishing industry.

Among other things, the revised legislation makes it mandatory for all persons fishing in Jamaican waters to have a valid licence issued by the relevant authority.

Persons fishing in a pond situated on a single private property and persons fishing with a line from the seashore have been exempted from obtaining a licence.

Under the legislation, fisherfolk can be fined a maximum of $10,000 for failing to produce the licence while they are fishing. It also provides a maximum fine of $50,000 for failure to report a fishing vessel that is lost or no longer seaworthy. It also imposes a fine for failing to stow fishing gear in a prescribed manner or for leaving decayed or dying fish in any net or other fishing equipment.

 

IMPOSED FINES

 

Veteran Senator K.D. Knight, speaking during the debate on the bill, said that while fisherfolk are expected to abide by the law, "there are some who are going to break the law, sometimes unwittingly.

"And when they break the law, they are going to end up in prison. They are going to end up in prison because some of these fines that have been imposed are unreasonable, and some of the sentences that have been suggested are unreasonable," Knight said.

"The little fisherman is affected, enuh. Ten thousand dollars might represent, for him, four trips at sea. Four trips," he emphasised, calling the penalty disproportionate.

Knight questioned, too, the move to penalise fisherfolk for failing to report a vessel that had fallen into disrepair.

 

ADDED LAYER OF SECURITY

 

Government Senator Kamina Johnson Smith, who piloted the bill, disclosed that this was another layer of security for law-enforcement authorities.

She explained that law-enforcement personnel sometimes intercepted a vessel and were told that it had been reported stolen. As a result, she said that the new reporting requirement would better enable law-enforcement personnel to track the vessel.

The revised legislation also mandates the establishment of a tribunal that will be responsible for, among other things, hearing appeals from persons who are refused a fishing licence.

livern.barrett@gleanerjm.com