Hello Eric,
Its been painful to watch the last 10 years of net trainings predictably fail. All I can say is that I had nothing to do with them.
I trained several hundred cyanide fisherman before this time and my graduates have been utilized in Tonga, Fiji, Palau and the
Red Sea. They did not go back to cyanide and have trained many more since the early days.
None of my original crews have been used by the IMAs or the MAC trainings. Because net collecting is superior to drug collecting there is little problem that the guys will revert back to cyanide. .. However, you have to actually know how to train the divers and not fake it. I spent a number of years living and working in collecting villages to do the job right. Its hard to answer for what has been substituted in place of the original training format and methodology.
I know Ferdie and spent time with him at the Marine Ornamental Conference as well. He confided in me that he didn't even have the 1/4 inch mesh clear handnet material that my old divers had and that his concerns about the field often fell on deaf ears. Ferdie was not a commercial fish collector. He was a middleman and field organizer. He does the best he can given the fact that he has very different skills than those required to make conversions stick. However, he actually knows more than the rest of the MAC and IMA office people put together.
Why do you think I've been so critical of the city based, top-heavy MAC and IMA approach to village net training? Ferdie works for BOTH of them and has anchored their net training schemes for years now. The fact that you have personal knowledge of his frustrations begs an important question. Do you think that MAC/IMA are unaware of his feelings? More importantly, do you think that the MAC/IMA approach is not only NOT expert but perhaps not even competent? How can such serious fundraising, lobbying, conferencing and campaigning go forth for these past years with an admittedly inadequate field training program?
And if the actual netsman training itself suffers from poor implementation how are they ever going to train anyone to the higher and better standards required for certification?
If we're going to attempt to train poor divers to the highest standards and maintain this enhanced skill level all the way to market, who is going to train the trainers? The failure of MAC and the IMA to establish even basic, qualified training teams is an alarming notion to behold. For years they have represented to the trade, the funding community and the environmental community that they are exactly what the doctor ordered to engineer a sustainable aquarium trade!
[Pointing this out has not been a good career move let me tell you.] There is a need in all of us to agree that we're all OK and that our trade is defensible and sustainable. Of course it 'can be' but how much time do we really have to get it right? MAC and the IMA have tapped into our need to have someone fix this thing for us. We have put hope over reason and resisted the more 'radical' reformers who have tried to tell us that we're wasting time and not really accomplishing that much.
Squandering this goodwill is kinda like treason to the real interests of the trade because it breeds cynicism and is demoralizing. Years go by as it exhausts the idealists among us.
Simply and honestly training the divers to collect and handle fish properly didn't have to be such a big deal. It is precisely the lack of doing this that should raise eyebrows and create a demand for higher standards of performance from those who claim to represent higher standards of performance.
Sincerely, Steve Robinson
former trainer