The St. Eustatius marine park ranks high on the list
of good Caribbean diving. So why would the Caribbean
Explorer drop it from its itinerary and add more time at
mediocre St. Kitts?
The Statia marine park welcomes liveaboards
as long as they pay the park and immigration fees.
However, Kate Walker, the manager of St. Eustatius
National Parks (STENAPA), says that “It is a requirement
for all divers to dive within the park under the
supervision of island operators. In the past this was
done by one of the dive centers for the CEX, however
this arrangement stopped working, so the marine park
offered the supervision services of the park staff for
free. When I took over as manager of the parks I found
that we could not realistically continue. We are under
funded, under staffed and cannot feasibly afford the
staff time away from the park work to continue this for
CEX.”
According to Walker, local STENAPA suggested this
past July that CEX use dive operators again. However,
Clay McCardell owner of Caribbean Explorer vessels,
doesn’t want to hire local guides. He wants to “send
our instructors (who have many years of diving supervision
experience) to be certified as guides there, but we
have been turned down.”
While potential passengers of the CEX might not
be pleased, Walthers says: “we are not unhappy with
this . . . it is not a loss for the island. The guests on
board don’t (or almost don’t) go on shore. They take
advantage of the marine park and that’s it. They don’t
bring anything to the local economy (restaurants, gift
shops, etc.). Besides that, the CEX is also an unfair
competitor for the local dive shops. The CEX does not
have to pay taxes, work and resident permits for the
employers, mandatory insurances, etc.”
McCardell says that “the discontinuation of our
Statia visits was largely a result of popular demand, but
also a result of the local politics – the local dive shops
just don’t want us there, because they feel we’re taking
their business . . . we weren’t welcome to dive the best
sites and certain local shops would complain about
our operation even to our clients who stopped in their
stores during their tour of the island…”
Somehow, I don’t think that is going to happen.
Too bad. Statia diving is a crown jewel missing from its
itinerary
This is an issue that can exist between all liveaboards
and local communities: the interloper vs. the
locals. When amount of exchange is enough? Off a
liveaboard in Fiji, we divers visited the chief, shared
a little dancing, then contributed $25 each to the village
larder. Everyone felt like they were getting their
money’s worth. I can imagine the resentment on Statia
when a dozen faceless divers who have sprung for a
couple grand show up and dive the local waters without
leaving much green behind How much should they
spend to be welcome? Would a much more substantial
cash contribution to the underfunded park be enough,
or are the dive operations powerful enough to demand
business as part of the deal? Are the dive shops being
short sighted? After all, I know of several divers who
were so impressed with Statia, they returned for a landbased
dive trip and to volunteer for cleanup with the
Park. That’s some payback.