Cape Breton Post

GOOD NEWS FOR WAYCOBAH

ACOA announces $1M in aquacultur­e funding.

- BY ERIN POTTIE erin.pottie@cbpost.com

Waycobah’s steelhead trout industry has received $1 million in funding from the federal Atlantic Canada Opportunit­ies Agency to help expand its operations.

The First Nation band will use the money to buy cages, nets, moorings and a work barge, upgrade docks, perform electrical work and add a fish counter.

“We’re two-thirds of where we want to be in terms of growing our fish and harvesting,” Chief Rod Googoo said Friday.

“This money is going to allow us to go to 100 per cent where we want to be.”

The funding has been allocated through ACOA’s business developmen­t program, which supports small- and mediumsize­d business and not-forprofits.

Waycobah will also invest $750,000 of its own operating revenues into the project. As a result, it will be able to grow one million fingerling­s per year.

This is the second time in several months that the Waycobah project has received federal dollars. In January, Ottawa delivered $545,000 in grants to further develop the fish farm and upgrade its processing facility.

According to Googoo, the latest funding allocation will create 10 new jobs with widereachi­ng economic impacts.

“When you have that many people employed you can imagine the spinoffs to the neighbouri­ng areas,” said Googoo. “Everybody is now going out and buying cars or furniture, or stuff for kids, people have money now.”

Waycobah and a partner originally launched themselves into the trout fishery in 2012. Since taking sole ownership of the project three years ago, the band operation has grown from eight employees to 45.

Googoo said helping their continued expansion is the recent purchase of a fish hatchery in Wolfville, N.S., that will them allow it to manage all aspects of trout raising.

The band had considered building its own hatching facility but was concerned with the length of time it would take to get the project off the ground.

Googoo said over the course of 2017, the band sold $2.6 million worth of steelhead trout, while that number is expected to increase to $4 million by the year’s end.

Projected figures for 2019 show revenues increasing to $15 million.

Googoo said their story is one of many reasons why Nova Scotia serves as a living example of how First Nation communitie­s and government can work together in a spirit of truth and reconcilia­tion.

“I think the rest of Canada should come down,” he said. “They can learn a lot from us.”

In terms of selling the fish, Waycobah already has an agreement with Northern Harvest Sea Farm Ltd. for the purchase and market of all product harvested at the farm.

MP for Cape Breton-Canso, Rodger Cuzner, said the trout farm is a true success story.

“They’ve sort of found a real niche,” said Cuzner. “They’re good at it, they’re successful at it and this community has taken a great deal of pride in what they’re able to do with the aquacultur­e sector.”

According to government figures, last year there were 27 cages for market fish. That number is expected to increase to 92 cages over the next two years.

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 ?? ERIN POTTIE/CAPE BRETON POST ?? James Martin lines up rope at the Waycobah trout farm on Friday. There were 170,000 steelhead trout harvested last year, while it is expected that another 400,000 trout will this harvested this year.
ERIN POTTIE/CAPE BRETON POST James Martin lines up rope at the Waycobah trout farm on Friday. There were 170,000 steelhead trout harvested last year, while it is expected that another 400,000 trout will this harvested this year.
 ?? ERIN POTTIE/CAPE BRETON POST ?? Rodger Cuzner, MP for Cape Breton-Canso, left, and Waycobah (We’koqma’q) Chief Rod Googoo shake hands following an announceme­nt that the federal government will contribute $1 million to assist in the expansion of the First Nation band’s aquacultur­e operation.
ERIN POTTIE/CAPE BRETON POST Rodger Cuzner, MP for Cape Breton-Canso, left, and Waycobah (We’koqma’q) Chief Rod Googoo shake hands following an announceme­nt that the federal government will contribute $1 million to assist in the expansion of the First Nation band’s aquacultur­e operation.

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