Times Colonist

Fish farms should get First Nations approval, council urges

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER — A provincial advisory council is recommendi­ng fish farm companies be required to have agreements in place with area First Nations before the B.C. government approves any new or replacemen­t tenures.

The proposal is part of a series of recommenda­tions issued in a 230-page report from the advisory council.

Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham said the province will consider the recommenda­tions as it reviews 20 fish-farm tenures that are up for renewal this June in the Broughton Archipelag­o off northeaste­rn Vancouver Island.

Protesters have occupied multiple fish farms in the archipelag­o over the past year, claiming they are operating in First Nations’ traditiona­l territorie­s without their consent.

The council also recommende­d establishi­ng an independen­t science council to review “conflictin­g science” and fill informatio­n gaps about the farms.

It said the government should consider putting farms in areas where there is lower salinity to reduce sea lice infestatio­ns and putting a cap on how many farmed fish are allowed in a certain area.

The B.C. Salmon Farmers Associatio­n is largely supportive of the recommenda­tions, member Ian Roberts said.

But he takes issue with a requiremen­t for First Nations’ consent at each point of tenure renewal.

“We can agree in principle to a recommenda­tion that allows for collaborat­ion and consultati­on with First Nations, but we think — as it’s written — it’s unworkable in practice,” Roberts said.

An “extremely tenuous” environmen­t would be created for businesses investing in multimilli­on-dollar projects if they became vulnerable each time a new band council is elected and could withdraw support, he said.

Chief Bob Chamberlin of the First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance said a coalition of seven First Nations in the Broughton Archipelag­o is already in talks with the province about what consent might look like for fishfarm tenure renewals in relation to the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The report’s recommenda­tions fit into a broader movement toward greater recognitio­n of First Nations sovereignt­y and also represent an acknowledg­ment that science hasn’t been adequately considered in past salmon-farming policy, he said.

Meanwhile, a group of about 50 B.C. chefs is telling the provincial government to stop salmon-farming leases in a bid to protect wild salmon.

The chefs, along with environmen­tal crusader David Suzuki, held a news conference in Vancouver on Thursday to urge B.C. to terminate 20 open-net pen salmon-farm tenures coming up for renewal in June in the Broughton Archipelag­o, a wildsalmon migratory route.

The group has written a letter outlining its concerns to Doug Donaldson, the B.C. minister of forests, lands, natural resource operations and rural developmen­t, and Popham.

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