Financial Times: "The 'worker-driven social responsibility' pilot would ensure minimum standards around wages, rest and grievance procedures."
Mike Park, head of the Scottish White Fish Producers Association, to the Financial Times: "Park said he hoped the 'nuts and bolts' of the programme could be agreed by the end of 2023, with a view to launching it next year. If successful, the scheme could be replicated across the UK."
Investigation: "A fisherman is six times more likely to die at work than those in the most dangerous job on land…”
In September of last year, the CIW and the International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) announced a groundbreaking collaboration to "explore the implementation of the award-winning WSR model in the UK fishing industry." Their goal: To build and launch a pilot program, based on the CIW’s Fair Food Program, with fishers, vessel owners, and retail seafood buyers to address generations of labor abuse on the high seas. Today -- nearly one year of coalition building and careful planning later -- the work in the UK is picking up steam, and the growing partnership for a more modern fishing industry is looking to be ready to launch by the end of 2023, according to reporting from the Financial Times.
Inspired and informed by the unparalleled success of the Fair Food Program, this pilot, which has been referred to as the ‘Fair Fish’ Program, will be the first-ever WSR program for fishers, who have historically been some of the most marginalized workers around the globe, with extremely dangerous working conditions and many at risk of modern-day slavery. The CIW and the Fair Food Standards Council have been closely advising this pilot, hosting a delegation of UK fishing industry leaders in Immokalee for a several day visit with Fair Food Program workers, growers and buyers, after traveling to Scotland last last year to see the fishing industry up close, and visiting London again this year for a series of follow-up meetings. And now that the initiative is gaining momentum, some of the UK's biggest buyers of seafood are in talks to provide the market power that would give this pilot the teeth it needs to enforce the rights of vulnerable fishers under its protections.
This comes at a crucial time for thousands of fishers in the country: a recent exposé on the UK fishing industry detailed the myriad workplace dangers migrant fishermen face, and is worth reading to get a full sense of what happens when workers do not have an effective voice and the power to monitor and enforce their own rights.
Here are a few excerpts from that expose:
“On average, 38 fishermen are killed or injured on UK-registered vessels each year, according to the government’s Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB). A fisherman is six times more likely to die at work than those in the most dangerous job on land…”
“...Locals often saw migrant fishers working onshore. Over the course of reporting this story, I spoke to other migrant crew elsewhere in the UK who said they had been required to work on land or were otherwise mistreated. The International Transport Workers’ Federation, Stella Maris and the Fishermen’s Mission shared more than a dozen recent accounts of alleged abuse involving employers elsewhere not detailed in this article, including several which are the subject of modern slavery investigations. “It’s not right,” one retired captain in Kilkeel told me. “They’re the same as ourselves, not different people. If it wouldn’t be for migrant workers, there wouldn’t be no boats.”
"In the Philippines, working abroad conveys a certain status; Filipinos account for more than a quarter of the globe’s seafarers. So the migrants in Kilkeel tended not to publicise the downsides of their life in the UK. On Facebook, they didn’t post photos of the cabins they shared with four or five others for hundreds of days on end. They didn’t talk of the cuts and cracks on their salt-chapped hands. Instead, they shared pictures of themselves on deck in the sun or posing in second-hand leather jackets and trainers...”
As the WSR pilot program in Scotland gets close to launching, the ultimate goal is that it can be scaled to meet the full scope of this moment in the UK fishing industry and join the growing ranks of proven WSR programs, including the FFP in agriculture, the Milk with Dignity Program in dairy, the Bangladesh and Pakistan Accords in textiles and a nascent program fighting gender-based violence in Lesotho's garment sector.
Here is a snippet of Financial Times piece, which you can read in its entirety on our website: