Sandy brings fishing bonanza to Jamaica village

(Jamaica Gleaner) While Hurricane Sandy has left pain and anguish in sections of eastern Jamaica, for the residents of Whitehouse Fishing Village in Montego Bay, it has brought them absolute delight: the fish that descended on the coastline to escape the tempest in the east.

“It has been very good for us,” president of the Whitehouse Fishermen’s Cooperative, Troy Jumpp, said in reference to the significant increase in the fish population off the Whitehouse coastline. “This is not unusual for us. Whenever there is such a disturbance in climate, this usually happen.

“Hurricanes normally disturb the fish population, and when they hit areas like the western section of Haiti, Cuba, or Cayman, we will get fish in large numbers here – even some that we don’t usually find in our waters,” added Jumpp.

However, while the fishing bonanza has given the Whitehouse fisherfolk the capacity to feed even the multitude that Jesus Christ fed in the biblical account of the feeding of the 5,000, the level-headed Jumpp is fully cognisant of the fact that their present good fortune will not last forever and the pre-bonanza concerns will once again resurface.

“We are keen that the members of the Fishermen’s Cooperative continue to exercise good fishing practice in order to protect their livelihood,” said Jumpp. “In fact, we are calling for a meeting with Agriculture and Fisheries Minister Roger Clarke to discuss the various issues and concerns we have been facing.”

According to Jumpp, over the years, the fishermen have been facing challenges such as the absence of a cold storage facility, the high cost of fishing gear, and slowness of the licensing procedure, which collectively make fishing unattractive to youth in the community.

“We have been calling for a meeting for years, but successive governments have refused to sit with us and only seek to make politically correct statements while the industry is dying,” said Jumpp. “The fact is that right now, most of the older fishermen are dying out and the younger generation has no real interest in continuing because the support system is not encouraging.”