Fishing vessel safety issues arising from the case of the Mary Kate trawler will be discussed by the Oireachtas Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs on Tuesday (Jan 27).
The meeting at 11am in Committee Room 2 of Leinster House will be split into two sessions:
11am – Mr C J Gaffney, former owner of the Mary Kate WD30;
12:20pm – Officials from the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine and the Department of Transport.
Ahead of the meeting, committee chair Conor McGuinness said: “The Mary Kate was a German-registered trawler which was purchased by the Gaffney family of Arklow, Co Wicklow in 2007 and then registered in Ireland.”
“The vessel was later found to be unstable and unsafe, and following testing in 2009, was found to be 15-20 tonnes heavier than recorded in the German registration, and this dangerously compromised its stability,” he said.
“The Gaffneys then found themselves in the position where an insurance payout was refused due to this discrepancy, they were time-barred from taking legal action against the sellers and the German registration authority, and were also unable to avail of an Irish decommissioning scheme where owners were paid by the State to scrap their vessel,” he said.
“The Gaffneys later paid to lengthen the vessel, which remedied the stability fault, and Irish authorities re-certified the Mary Kate as safe to operate. However, they were unable to return to fish due to delays in increasing the vessel’s capacity tonnage and decided to sell,” McGuinness continued.
“A buyer was found in the UK, but authorities there refused registration due to the vessel’s previous issues. By 2012 the Gaffney family were left with significant losses and debt arising from this saga,”he said.
“The case of the Mary Kate WD30 raises serious issues with implications for the wider public policy and public interest around the registration and safety of fishing vessels in Ireland and the EU,”he said.
“The committee welcomes this opportunity to engage with Mr C J Gaffney and his family, and with officials from the two departments with responsibilities in this area, Transport and Agriculture, Food and the Marine, to discuss fishing vessel safety issues and related matters,” he said.
The Joint Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs has 14 Members, nine from the Dáil and five from the Seanad.
The meeting in Committee Room 2 can be viewed live on Oireachtas TV.
Committee proceedings can also be viewed on the Houses of the Oireachtas Smartphone App, available for Apple and Android devices.

















































