The Ministry of Sports, Culture and the Arts, Fisheries and Co-operatives will host a meeting with Fishers from Telescope, Marquis, Soubise, Grenville and surrounding communities on Thursday, 25 February 2021, beginning at 5 pm in Soubise, St Andrew.
Among others, the meeting will discuss upcoming coastal conservation and eco-friendly construction projects to be implemented in the Grenville Bay Area.
Projects to be implemented include a protected fair-weather storage for boats and equipment, increased coastal vegetation for near-shore habitat, reduced erosion and filtered runoff, and improved areas for community gatherings.
The coastal conservation and eco-friendly construction projects carded for the Grenville Bay Area will be implemented by the Ministry of Sports, Culture and the Arts, Fisheries and Co-operatives in collaboration with The Nature Conservancy (TNC) through the TNC’s ‘At the Water’s Edge’ initiative.
Expected to give remarks and presentations at the meeting are Minister for Sports, Culture and the Arts, Fisheries and Co-operatives and Parliamentary Representative for St Andrew South-West Hon. Yolande Bain-Horsford; Climate Adaptation Specialist at The Nature Conservancy (TNC) Nealla Frederick; and a representative from the contractor Glean’s Construction.
GIS
Hello, I am a yachtie tourist from Germany and what I see in only one day here inSandy Island in a marin reserve is ridiculous. Lokals spearfish, troll fishing lines behind and fish with big round nets just in front of the beach where all the colourful reeffish are ( and the tourist catamarans). And nobody cares. It is a shame. I think the only reason to protect this area is to collect fees from the tourist. But this is shortsighted because when all fish are gone the tourists want come anymore.
Subject: Un-controlled fishing by foreign yachtsmen/tourists. When will Grenada preserve its Resources for the benefit of the citizens. Grenada should charge a fishing fee for all yachtsmen who plan to fish in and around the island. How could we honestly say we benefit from the influx of yachtsmen spending hurrucane season in our islands, when they are not spending for the resources we can provide at a cost to benefit our economy. The fish and lobsters at close range to the islands is for the use of the locals . We feed our families with this in a crunch. We can also sell to the tourist/yachtsmen to provide for our families and the help the Grenadian economy. What is happening right now is wrong. We should seek to benefit from all of our resources. Charging for and maintaining a mooring field while giving away lobster meals to the tourist on a daily basis is backwards. They are laughing at you Grenada. Dont be blind to Resources you are allowing to slip away into the hands of the tourist. If tourism is your major source for economy building act like you know how to monitize your Resources. If you collect $1 and give away $1.50 you are being laughed at. SOULTION: Charge a fishing fee to all boats intending to fish. Adopt the policy held by the Bahsmas. If you do not adopt the Bahamas Policy on fishing by tourist, the locals will have to venture out further and further out –endangering their lives in small wooden boats — at sea to find food for their families. The yachtsmen do not order the lobster meals (an income generator for the local Restuarants) because they can get it for free. Who is left to buy these meals at a high price? Guess who ?The local citizen seeking to treat him or herself special on a sunday. Dont wait to benefit from your Resources Grenada. Get it when you are getting rave reviews for your tropical paradise. These rave reviews die when you are trampled over like a gold rush without checks and fees. Just Saying.