The Daily Telegraph

‘Fisherpeop­le’ find PC BBC hard to fathom

- By Anita Singh Arts And Entertainm­ent Editor

THE BBC’S guidelines are difficult to decode at the best of times.

But an advisory note about gender and job titles led to Radio 4’s Today programme discussing the livelihood­s of “f i sherpeople” yesterday, rather than “fishermen”.

Katya Adler, t he BBC’S Europe editor, made the reference during a discussion about f ishing rights postBrexit.

Her descriptio­n raised eyebrows within the industry, where only a handful of women go out to sea.

The industry body in the UK is the National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisati­ons. Its chairman, Barrie Deas, said “f i sherpeople” was a clumsy term.

“There are women in the industry on the processing a nd management side – i ncluding a president and chair of this federation – so the reality is that women are well- r epresented in t he industry as a whole but not very much on the catching side. It’s really only a handful. Mostly it’s men that crew t he boats,” said Mr Deas. While there are no official statistics in the UK, a recent study in Norway found that women account for 2.7-3.2 per cent of “fisherpeop­le”.

Mr Deas had a suggestion of his own for gender neutral terminolog­y. “If anyone feels t he need t o change t he nomenclatu­re, that’s easily resolved,” he said.

“In north-east Scotland, where I’m from, they refer to ‘fishers’.”

A trawl of the BBC style guide suggests that “men” should be lef t out of j ob descriptio­ns on air unless it is a fact that the job is the sole preserve of men.

The guide states: “Unless you are sure only males are involved, avoid words such as ‘newsmen’, ‘businessme­n’ and ‘policemen’. Substitute journalist­s, business leaders, police officers etc, as appropriat­e.” Asked about t he prospect of changing his federation’s name, Mr Deas said: “If it was a request from a woman president and chair of our executive committee, or if it came from some of the big fishing business run by women, we would very rapidly change. Although we would have to repaint all the signs.”

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