Saskatoon StarPhoenix

First Nations group wins surf clam fishery licence

- GEORDON OMAND

A company made up of OTTAWA First Nations members from Quebec and Atlantic Canada — and led by the brother of a Liberal MP — has won a new licence for Arctic surf clam, ending a longtime monopoly on the multimilli­on-dollar industry held by fisheries giant Clearwater Seafoods Inc.

Granting the lucrative offshore licence to Five Nations Premium Clam Co. will boost Indigenous participat­ion in the industry and spread economic and social benefits across Eastern Canada, said Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc. “This is a powerful step toward reconcilia­tion,” LeBlanc said.

“The inclusion of participan­ts from each Atlantic province and Quebec will allow the benefits of this lucrative fishery to flow to a broad group of First Nations, and will help create good, middle-class jobs for Indigenous peoples in each Atlantic province and Quebec.”

Last year, the government announced it would add a fourth licence comprising 25 per cent of the total allowable catch of Arctic surf clam, and that the successful applicant would be an Indigenous entity and majority Canadian-owned.

Five Nations Premium Clam will partner with Premium Seafoods to harvest, process and market the catch.

Edgar Samson, whose brother is Liberal MP Darrell Samson, is listed as president for both companies.

“Our company, its employees and the small rural communitie­s of Isle Madame (in Cape Breton) are excited to participat­e in the surf clam fishery with our Indigenous partners,” Samson said in a statement.

Chief Aaron Sock of the Elsipogtog First Nation in New Brunswick said he applauds the government for “its commitment to reconcilia­tion” and for the jobs the fishery will create in his community.

Clearwater is crying foul over the announceme­nt and promising legal action against the government following its own unsuccessf­ul bid, which involved partnering with 13 Mi’kmaq bands in Nova Scotia.

“The minister has destabiliz­ed the investment climate in the Canadian fisheries and the Canadian natural resource sector,” the company said in a statement, adding that it invested $156 million over the past three years to boost its capacity and develop the fishery and the market.

Clearwater took in more than $90 million from Arctic surf clam sales in 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada