National Post (National Edition)

‘IN DEBT TO HIS EYEBALLS’: FROM A QUICK CATCH TO A TRAGIC END

KATLIN NICKERSON WAS ‘PLAYING WITH FIRE’ WHEN HE SET OUT TO FISH FOR HALIBUT IN FEBRUARY. BUT HE WAS IN FINANCIAL STRAITS AND NEEDED A PROFITABLE CATCH — QUICK.

- BY QUENTIN CASEY IN HALIFAX

On Feb. 12, 2013, an unseasonab­ly warm evening, five young fishermen departed the West Head wharf on Cape Sable Island, N.S. aboard the Miss Ally, a 12-metre Cape Islander. The men, spanning in age from 21 to 33 — three of them fathers of young children— were headed out in pursuit of halibut, a valuable winter catch.

On deck that night were Billy Jack Hatfield, a recently engaged 33-year-old; Cole Nickerson, 28, a burly and strong former junior hockey player; Joel Hopkins, a 27-year-old father of two who absolutely loved the thrill of fishing; and Tyson Townsend, 25, a gifted athlete with a seven-month-old daughter.

At the wheel, piloting the boat into darkness, was Katlin Nickerson, Miss Ally’s 21-yearold captain and owner. Two years earlier, Nickerson — from nearby Woods Harbour — paid roughly $700,000 for his boat, gear and a lobster licence.

Only three years out of high school, Katlin Nickerson, the grandson of one of Woods Harbour’s top fishermen, had his own boat and an experience­d crew. But Nickerson was struggling financiall­y, especially following two years of poor prices in the lobster fishery.

During the most recent lobster season, 2012-13, Nickerson wasn’t making any money, yet he still had large payments to make. “The boy was in debt to his eyeballs, let’s face it,” said John Symonds, a fellow Woods Harbour captain and friend of Nickerson.

That financial pressure contribute­d to Nickerson’s aggressive and sometimes questionab­le decisions on the water. “He knew he was, so to speak, playing with fire,” Symonds said during interviews for a recent book about the Miss Ally sinking, The Sea Was in Their Blood. “He knew he was pushing it to the limit. But he had to, because he had these big bills.”

The five men aboard the Miss Ally had much in common. They were all from fishing families and each took to fishing early. (Hatfield started fishing full time at age 13, after dropping out of seventh grade).

Although they didn’t realize it at the time, the five men aboard the Miss Ally also shared a common fate: the mid-February halibut trip would be their last. And none of them would be seen again.

Commercial fishing is a dangerous occupation. An average of five to six fishingrel­ated deaths occur each year in Nova Scotia alone. According to the Transporta­tion Safety Board (TSB), 55 deaths occurred on Canadian fishing vessels between 1999 and August 2015 simply due to people falling overboard. A recent TSB investigat­ion concluded: “despite many safety initiative­s, unsafe practices continue in the fishing industry.”

It’s also an industry of huge costs. Boats for lobstering and longlining for ground fish can easily cost more than $500,000. Licences, meanwhile, cost tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars. In Nova Scotia, a trio of licences— lobster, mackerel and herring — was recently listed for sale at $450,000. Lobster and crab licences, depending on recent landings, can go for more than $1 million.

Many fishermen view their licences as retirement investment­s — something to sell for a good price at the end of their careers.

In a July speech, Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc said licences are “over-valued.” Speaking in Western Shore, N.S., LeBlanc said he wanted to make the “licensing process fairer,” and called on the industry to help him fix the situation.

“Fishing licences have become over-valued in recent years, especially here in southwest Nova Scotia. This makes it extremely difficult for young fishermen to access the fishery, and more often than not prevents new entrants altogether,” he said in the text of the speech, supplied by his office.

“A system where access to a fishing licence is determined by who you’re related to or how many hundreds of thousands of dollars you have, or how much debt you are willing to take on, seems unfair.”

LeBlanc, however, did not present solutions.

In an interview, LeBlanc added: “To pretend that we don’t have a problem, that’s growing, is not responsibl­e for the long-term economic survival of that sector.”

Melanie Sonnenberg, president of the Canadian Independen­t Fish Harvesters’ Federation, said most Canadians don’t understand the costs and financial risk associated with commercial fishing.

“It’s not just the boats and gear. There’s rules and regulation­s that have costs to them,” said Sonnenberg, whose group represents thousands of fishermen on both coasts.

She points to expensive equipment, much of it mandatory, such as life rafts, survival suits and Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRBs). “All of those things come with a price tag,” she said, noting such items total thousands of dollars. “It just goes on and on.”

Does Sonnenberg believe financial pressures are causing fishermen to make risky decisions on the water? “I would hope that that’s not the case,” she said in a recent interview from Grand Manan Island, N.B. Though she admitted: “It’s a big coastline.”

LeBlanc offered a similar response.

“I would hope that people wouldn’t put their safety and the safety of their crew in jeopardy because of economic pressures. That, to me, is a completely unreasonab­le circumstan­ce,” he said. “We should never create circumstan­ces where fishers, because of economic pressure, take risks.”

In Nickerson’s case, he financed his purchase through the Nova Scotia Vessel Loan Program, a provincial program that provides loans to fishermen building and buying boats.

As one fish industry veteran told me recently, requesting anonymity: “Show me another 21-year-old who can borrow almost a million dollars. The only way to do that is with a letter of acceptance to med school.”

February is a dangerous month to fish offshore, particular­ly in a 40-foot Cape Islander. But that’s when the price of halibut is best, rising 25 to 50 per cent because the supply is low. Fewer fishermen are willing to go after halibut in winter so suppliers pay more for it.

Nickerson and his crew on the Miss Ally sought their catch of halibut south of LaHave Bank, nearly 200 kilometres from Halifax, close to where the continenta­l shelf drops off to deeper water.

In February 2013, halibut was fetching $7 to $10 a pound, causing what was described then as an “explosion” in the halibut fishery.

The high price of halibut contrasted sharply with the terrible price of lobster: the 2012–13 lobster season opened with a wharf price of just $3 per pound. Such a price makes it impossible to generate a profit. A captain might be able to pay for his expenses — fuel, bait, gear, crew — but little else. Neither Nickerson nor Symonds, his former captain, were making any money from lobstering that year.

And yet Nickerson still had numerous expenses, as many fishing boat owners do. Symonds lists some: loan payments, an insurance bill of roughly $4,000, and annual maintenanc­e costs in the $15,000-to-$20,000 range.

“When you start out with a second-hand boat and garbage for gear, and you’re $700,000 or $800,000 or more in the red, I’m gonna tell you what: you want to get out of bed in the morning. You don’t want to be snoozing,” Symonds said. “Because when you get behind, you’re done.”

It’s a point echoed by Nickerson’s father, Todd, also a fisherman: “He got himself in quite the hole.”

Just before Christmas 2012, Nickerson, Hatfield and Hopkins hauled lobster traps on a day so windy and rough that all other local crews stayed on land. At sea, a large wave covered the deck with water, nearly washing Hatfield and Hopkins overboard.

The incident was later discussed on Facebook.

“Where was ya going anyway for 3 dollars (a pound),” asked Charles Sears in a post, “got to be something wrong with ya head.”

But Symonds knew why his former crewman was fishing in such conditions.

“John, I got some big bills coming at me and they’re not getting paid,” Nickerson told Symonds.

Nickerson was more than eager to pursue well-priced halibut in the winter of 2013.

On Feb. 17, after five days on the water, Nickerson and his crew had a solid catch on ice in the hold: between 15,000 and 20,000 pounds, worth up to $160,000. But Nickerson still had to guide that haul, his crew and the Miss Ally through a massive winter storm. Environmen­t Canada had for two days been warning that a major storm was approachin­g from Cape Hatteras.

The dire forecast prompted other local captains to haul in their longlining gear and steam for shore. Aboard the Miss Ally, a broken spotlight prevented the crew from finding their gear in the dark. Nickerson decided to stay overnight, haul the gear in the morning light, and then head for home. They eventually secured the gear, but didn’t start for shore until late afternoon.

Within hours of departing, the fishing grounds the Miss Ally was on were being thrashed by large waves, many of them more than 10 metres tall. One wave, recorded by a nearby weather buoy, measured 18.6 metres, making it equal in size to the largest waves recorded off Halifax during Hurricane Juan in 2003. At least one wave landed on deck, damaging the boat. Equally startling, Nickerson reported hurricane-force winds of 80 knots (150 kilometres an hour).

On shore, concerned family members and search and rescue personnel — including the Coast Guard — knew the men were in peril, caught in a vice of wicked winter weather.

Shortly after 11 p.m., Nickerson’s EPIRB was detected by satellite, signally that something disastrous had occurred aboard the boat.

A search and rescue effort was launched with two Coast Guard vessels. The storm was so severe that no search and rescue aircraft could take off from Nova Scotia during the initial hours of the search; the American Coast Guard sent the first plane.

Despite a two-day search, the men aboard the Miss Ally were never found.

If the events of that night had unfolded differentl­y, Symonds said, Nickerson and his crew would have landed at the wharf with up to 20,000 pounds of halibut. That winter catch would have netted a large profit and boosted Nickerson’s reputation as a top young fisherman.

“He was gonna be the best fisherman. Katlin didn’t want to be second best. He wanted to be No. 1. And he would stay longer and he would fish harder,” Symonds said. “I want people to know the truth about Katlin: he was trying to pay his bills … Three quarters of a million is what he paid for that piece of machinery. He had bills and he had everyone — myself included — rooting for him ... and I don’t think he wanted to disappoint any of us. That’s why he was there doing this. That’s why he pushed things to the limit.”

 ??  ?? A CAP THAT BELONGED TO KATLIN NICKERSON HANGS FROM THE CORNER OF A PHOTO OF THE 21-YEAR-OLD IN CAPT. KAT’S LOBSTER SHACK IN BARRINGTON PASSAGE, N.S.
A CAP THAT BELONGED TO KATLIN NICKERSON HANGS FROM THE CORNER OF A PHOTO OF THE 21-YEAR-OLD IN CAPT. KAT’S LOBSTER SHACK IN BARRINGTON PASSAGE, N.S.
 ??  ??
 ?? SANDOR FIZLI FOR NATIONAL POST ?? John Symonds stands on the dock in Woods Harbour, N.S. Symonds was a good friend of Katlin Nickerson, a fisherman whose vessel sank in February 2013.
SANDOR FIZLI FOR NATIONAL POST John Symonds stands on the dock in Woods Harbour, N.S. Symonds was a good friend of Katlin Nickerson, a fisherman whose vessel sank in February 2013.
 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Capsized Miss Ally
Capsized Miss Ally
 ??  ?? The Miss Ally
The Miss Ally
 ??  ?? Katlin Nickerson
Katlin Nickerson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada