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A
Little Goes a Long Way
By
Dustin Schrimpsher, NCFA Communications Director and Tradewinds Editor
Any
small businessman or housewife can tell you that saving a little money
here and there really ads up. When you buy off-brand sodas or used office
furniture you're always pleased to find money in savings when the kids
need new shoes or the business is ready to expand.
On
the same token, it's important to know when to spend a little extra on
things that are important. Fishermen know that when faced with engine
repair sometimes a few extra dollars can mean the difference between that
engine lasting one year or 10 years.
Once
we start streamlining our expenses it can be hard to loosen our purse
strings for those important "extras." Like engine repair, work
on the hull or perhaps some freezer maintenance. Preventative maintenance
is always cheaper than reactive maintenance. Likewise, thinking ahead puts
us in a better position to deal with crisis before they occur rather than
always reacting on the spot to put out fires.
Supporting
the North Carolina Fisheries Association can be a lot like remembering to
perform preventative maintenance. It's easy to be lulled into a false
since of security because, after all, you're legally allowed to fish right
now. That's like saying "This oil was good enough when the motor came
from the factory and it's good enough now."
The
easiest way to perform preventive maintenance on your fishery is through
the North Carolina Fisheries Association's ˝ Percent Program. The
brainchild of the late William Ellis Smith of Luther L. Smith & Son,
the ˝ Percent Program allows fishermen to become members without paying
membership dues, but rather by contributing ˝ of 1 percent of the net
profit of their boat's catch.
Since
it's implementation in 1991 the ˝ Percent Program has been the primary
source of growth for NCFA. That growth includes additional staff, the
monthly newspaper, Tradewinds, and overall improved lobbying and industry
support capabilities.
One of the best parts of being a ˝ Percent member is that if you aren't
making much money you don't give us much money. We all go through feast or
famine together. After Jerry's editorial last month ("Put Up…or
Shut Up!" Tradewinds, June 2001, Vol. 6, No.6) I heard from several
people incensed by Jerry's claim that anyone not supporting their trade
association is either cheap or stupid. After some discussion it turns out
that nearly all the folks angered by the column were ˝ Percent Members.
But since they paid out so little money it hadn't occurred to them that
they were members.
If
you've been putting off performing preventative maintenance on your
fishery to save a little money, now would be a good time to put a little
of that cash into preventative maintenance. It's too late to fix the roof
once a storm has come and gone.
There's hardly a fishery in North Carolina that someone hasn't tried to
shut down at one time or another. And odds are somebody will try to shut
your fishery down some time soon. Without a trade group in your corner
there isn't much you can hope to do about it.
So
help us take care of our fisheries. Ask about the ˝ Percent Program
wherever you pack out. You'll pay only a few dollars a trip but, as I said
before, a little goes a long way..
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