Dept of Marine investigates pickers' rescue

A Department of the Marine investigation into the rescue of 13 eastern European periwinkle-pickers from an island off Skerries…

A Department of the Marine investigation into the rescue of 13 eastern European periwinkle-pickers from an island off Skerries could result in fines of up to €100,000 or a prison sentence of up to two years.

Ireland.comunderstands the focus of the investigation is on the status of t he craft used to transport the workers to the island and on whether EU measures regulating the processing and sale of periwinkles were breached.

The Health and Safety Authority (HSA) and gardaí are also investigating the incident.
The Coast Guard was alerted at 9.45pm on Saturday night after a person informed them a boat had broken down off the islands at Skerries. It is understood one of the stranded group raised the alarm through contacting a person on the shore with a mobile phone.
Under the Merchant Shipping Act 1992, any vessel carrying more than 13 passengers requires a passenger ship safety certificate.

A passenger boat licence is also required under the act if the vessel was used to make several trips carrying less than 12 people to or from work on each occasion.

Under the act, if the owner and master are found guilty of breaching the act under indictment, they could be liable to a f ine of €100,000 or imprisonment for up to two years or both.
An inspector from the Marine Survey Office was sent to Skerries today to investigate the incident.

The Department is also looking into the sale and processing of the periwinkles. The processing and sale of periwinkles are strictly regulated by EU directives and t he department is investigating if these measures were breached.

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The group were picked up at 10pm on Saturday night by Skerries Lifeboat and taken to shore.

Green Party leader Trevor Sargent, a Dublin North TD, said it appeared to be an exploitative type of situation.

"The person responsible for it needs to be seriously questioned as to their motivation and knowledge of labour law, over their sense of responsibility to people in their employment. It has all the tragic connotations of the Morecambe Bay disaster," he said.

Jim Glennon, north Dublin Fianna Fáil TD, called for the setting up of an ethnic minorities section at the Health and Safety Authority to ensure there is no recurrence of the Colt Island incident.

Éanna Ó Caollaí

Éanna Ó Caollaí

Iriseoir agus Eagarthóir Gaeilge An Irish Times. Éanna Ó Caollaí is The Irish Times' Irish Language Editor, editor of The Irish Times Student Hub, and Education Supplements editor.