The Executive Council of the Corps is responsible for the overall sponsorship, financing, support and administration of the Corps. While the Council members are not uniformed personnel, many members over the years have been retired naval officers, including former Presidents of the BSCA Captain Sir David Tibbits, RN, DSC, and Captain Gilbert Hallam, RN, who had been a Commander, serving as Supply Officer of
HMS Seahawk, when he had met with then-Lieutenant J. Derek Taylor, RNR (SCC), leading a contingent of cadets training at
RNAS Culdrose in 1974. TS Bermuda, the first unit opened, is nominally the Headquarters unit. Each unit has its own Management Committee, responsible for raising funds for the unit's expenses. All officers in the Bermuda Sea Cadet Corps are members of the Royal Naval Reserve, and their names are followed by "RNR (SCC)". The rank bars worn on the cuffs of their jackets, and on epaulettes of shirts and pullovers follow the pattern of the old Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, being 'wavy', instead of straight. Each unit is under the command of a
Commander, or a
Lieutenant-Commander, RNR (SCC), with junior officers,
Warrant Officers, and
Cadet Instructors,
Cadet Petty Officers, and cadet
ratings making-up the rest of the command structure. Before the Royal Naval Base on Ireland Island,
HMS Malabar, closed in 1995, the Corps maintained a close relationship with it, with the commanding officer of the base having inspected the units annually. Cadets often are attached to Royal Navy vessels for sea experience, and also train on the UK Sea Cadet Corps tall ship, . The Corps has also taken a leading interest in the building of Bermuda's own tall ship for youth training, the
Spirit of Bermuda. Commander Anthony Lightbourne, RNR (SCC) was a Director of the
Bermuda Sloop Foundation, which built and operates the traditionally designed vessel. Female cadets and instructors had technically belonged nominally to the
Girls Nautical Training Corps (GNTC), although practically they served within the Bermuda Sea Cadet Corps units. This distinction ceased in 1992, when the GNTC was merged into the Sea Cadet Corps in the UK and Bermuda. In addition to training, the corps provides detachments for various public parades during the course of the year, including the
King's Birthday and
Remembrance Day. ==Uniform==