The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) has a high turnover rate, as well as a shortage of funding and equipment, a Control Yuan report found.
A high proportion of volunteer personnel are quitting after one year, Control Yuan member Pasuya Poiconu (浦忠成) said while presenting the report on Friday.
The problem is particularly acute among the 13 coastal patrol units, which have some of the heaviest and most demanding workloads, with personnel required to work rotating 24-hour shifts and be on constant alert.
Photo courtesy of the Coast Guard Administration
Among the reasons people gave for resigning after one year at the coastal patrol units were the heavy workload, being unable to control their use of personal time, day-night shift rotations leading to deteriorating health and wishing to seek other lines of work, the report said.
CGA officials said that due to the workload and 24-hour shifts, the coastal patrol units are mainly staffed by armed forces personnel.
In the past five years, more than 10 percent of volunteer personnel at the coastal patrol units asked to be discharged within a year, the report said.
CGA officials said they have taken up measures to improve the retention rate, such as raising stipends, reducing patrol duties and scheduling more fixed work.
However, the CGA said this did not have the desired effect.
The CGA falls under the Ocean Affairs Council.
Poiconu suggested the Ocean Affairs Council assist the CGA in setting up a dedicated body to recruit conscripts, volunteer personnel and qualified graduates.
Meanwhile, the report also said that estimated NT$84 million (US$2.65 million) is required to modernize the CGA’s tools and devices, and install state-of-the-art digital equipment.
The CGA’s total budget for this year is NT$26.5 billion.
While upgrades to the coastal patrol units’ equipment and devices began five years ago, they are still short 294 automatic and 149 digital cameras, while observation posts are short 105 night vision devices and harbor inspection stations are short 106 hand-held infrared sensors, the report said.
Coast guard units and patrol personnel at harbors need new equipment, including 180 new fixed searchlights and 100 miniature digital cameras at 180 and 100 units respectively, the report said.
A shortage of new electronic devices and observation equipment would affect the CGA’s ability to monitor and safeguard the nation’s coastline and marine territory, and could endanger coast guard personnel, Poiconu said.
The report suggested that NT$100 million of the budget be allocated to cover procurement and additional needs, adding that the purchase and delivery of new equipment should be expedited.
MISINFORMATION: The generated content tends to adopt China’s official stance, such as ‘Taiwan is currently governed by the Chinese central government,’ the NSB said Five China-developed artificial intelligence (AI) language models exhibit cybersecurity risks and content biases, an inspection conducted by the National Security Bureau (NSB) showed. The five AI tools are: DeepSeek, Doubao (豆包), Yiyan (文心一言), Tongyi (通義千問) and Yuanbao (騰訊元寶), the bureau said, advising people to remain vigilant to protect personal data privacy and corporate business secrets. The NSB said it, in accordance with the National Intelligence Services Act (國家情報工作法), has reviewed international cybersecurity reports and intelligence, and coordinated with the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau and the National Police Agency’s Criminal Investigation Bureau to conduct an inspection of China-made AI language
BOOST IN CONFIDENCE: The sale sends a clear message of support for Taiwan and dispels rumors that US President Donald Trump ‘sold out’ the nation, an expert said The US government on Thursday announced a possible sale to Taiwan of fighter jet parts, which was estimated to cost about US$330 million, in a move that an expert said “sends a clear message of support for Taiwan” amid fears that Washington might be wavering in its attitude toward Taipei. It was the first announcement of an arms sale to Taiwan since US President Donald Trump returned to the White House earlier this year. The proposed package includes non-standard components, spare and repair parts, consumables and accessories, as well repair and return support for the F-16, C-130 and Indigenous Defense Fighter aircraft,
CHECKING BOUNDARIES: China wants to disrupt solidarity among democracies and test their red lines, but it is instead pushing nations to become more united, an expert said The US Department of State on Friday expressed deep concern over a Chinese public security agency’s investigation into Legislator Puma Shen (沈伯洋) for “secession.” “China’s actions threaten free speech and erode norms that have underpinned the cross-strait ‘status quo’ for decades,” a US Department of State spokesperson said. The Chongqing Municipal Public Security Bureau late last month listed Shen as “wanted” and launched an investigation into alleged “secession-related” criminal activities, including his founding of the Kuma Academy, a civil defense organization that prepares people for an invasion by China. The spokesperson said that the US was “deeply concerned” about the bureau investigating Shen
DISPUTE: A Chinese official prompted a formal protest from Tokyo by saying that ‘the dirty head that sticks itself out must be cut off,’ after Takaichi’s Taiwan remarks Four armed China Coast Guard vessels yesterday morning sailed through disputed waters controlled by Japan, amid a diplomatic spat following Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s comments on Taiwan. The four ships sailed around the Senkaku Islands — known as the Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) to Taiwan, and which Taiwan and China also claim — on Saturday before entering Japanese waters yesterday and left, the Japan Coast Guard said. The China Coast Guard said in a statement that it carried out a “rights enforcement patrol” through the waters and that it was a lawful operation. As of the end of last month,