Foreign fishermen will be invited to man British boats amid major skills shortage
Written by on May 25, 2023
FOREIGN fishermen will be invited to man British boats amid a major skills shortage – as the Government’s migration promises lie in tatters.
Tomorrow official Net Migration stats are due to smash record levels of arrivals, feared to top 800,000 for 2022.
That’s nearly four times the level the Tories promised at the 2019 election.
And in a fresh embarrassment for ministers the hugely symbolic fishing industry is the latest sector to need a foreign worker bail out.
Trawler skippers and experienced boat hands for large vessels have been added to the Short Occupation List meaning they can come to the UK to earn £20,960 instead of £26,200.
Applicants also pay a lower £479 free for a 3-year visa instead of £625.
Borders Minister Robert Jenrick insisted it is a “comprehensive package” to make sure the British fleet is “able to fully benefit from the fish in UK waters.”
“We strongly encourage the sector to engage with this to ensure they can attract the workers they need,” he added.
But Brexit stalwart Nigel Farage told The Sun British fishing is on its knees, facing shortages due to over-regulation despite leaving the EU.
“The anger in the industry is astonishing,” he said.
“Most fishermen I speak to are at already at their wits ends – I just give up.”
But ex-PM David Cameron was more sympathetic to the Government’s plight.
He urged them to use welfare reforms and training programmes to reduce the need for foreign labour.
The former premier, who never met his own goal of bringing net migration down to the “tens of thousands”, also hit out at critics of the Government’s Rwanda scheme.
He said there is “no point” complaining “if you don’t have a better answer” to the problem of small boat crossings.
Mr Cameron told LBC Radio: “I think the way to think about immigration is to recognise it’s a three-sided problem.
“There’s what immigration controls you can put in place.
“There’s what welfare reforms you have, to try and make sure that people who can work, do work.
“Then there’s what training and apprenticeship and other schemes you have, to make sure that we are training people for the jobs that our country is delivering.”
MY VIEW: ANTHONY MANGNALL MP, Totnes
HOMEGROWN talent shouldn’t be a fantasy – especially for the fishing industry.
This support for the seafood sector must be a temporary measure – but will come as welcome relief this summer.
Importing a workforce at the expense of training our citizens misses the the chance to create good, high-paying, long-lasting jobs.
South Devon College in my constituency is now running a ground-breaking Fisher Apprenticeship course with the express purpose of attracting and training more people to enter the fishing sector.
I hope it catches on around the country.
As the old saying goes, teach a man to fish and you don’t just feed him for life but give him a career.
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