Times Colonist

Fish harvesters reach deal, ending protests that shut N.L. government

- SARAH SMELLIE

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A fisherman who led protests this week that shut down the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador legislatur­e says he has reached a deal with the government to make it easier for harvesters to earn a living.

John Efford will drive home to Port de Grave, N.L., after spending three days with a crowd of fishers outside the provincial government building demanding what they called “free enterprise” in the fishery.

“I’m feeling great,” Efford said in an interview Friday. “This is a step towards fixing things.”

“Free enterprise, he added. “We have it.”

Fishers staged protests for about three weeks at the legislatur­e in St. John’s, calling on the government to ease regulation­s and let them sell their catch to companies outside the province, among other demands. The fishers complained that the small group of buyers in the province were acting as a cartel and pushing down prices.

Demonstrat­ions intensifie­d Wednesday morning when more than 100 harvesters blocked government officials from entering the building to deliver the Liberals’ budget.

Two Royal Newfoundla­nd Constabula­ry members on horseback rode into the crowd to break it up, but the harvesters stood their ground, and the officers ultimately steered the animals away. A fisherman and a police officer were carried away from the scene on stretchers, and the government had to delay the budget presentati­on by a day.

The crowd assembled again on Thursday morning and were met this time by a line of police in riot gear.

On Friday they gathered farther away, in a parking lot across the legislatur­e. The relocation was a condition on which Fisheries Minister Elvis Loveless agreed to meet with Efford, the harvester told the crowd that morning. Greg Pretty and Jason Spingle, executives with the inshore fishers’ union, were also part of the discussion.

As a result of the talks, the government agreed to allow “outside buyers,” including seafood processors in other jurisdicti­ons, to apply to buy fish caught in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Efford said.

The province also agreed to measures Efford said could create more competitio­n among processors.

“Not just for fishermen, it will make a big, massive difference for Newfoundla­nd,” he said.

The fisheries are a key economic driver in rural parts of the province, and many fishers this week said they were fighting for their communitie­s as much as their livelihood­s.

In a news release Friday, the Fish, Food and Allied Workers Union called the deal a victory that will improve market access for harvesters. It said the government agreed to allow fishers to sell their catch to buyers from outside the province, a key demand.

Loveless issued a statement lauding “a productive meeting that has led to positive outcomes.”

“We all share the same goal of seeing an organized start to the 2024 fishing season,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Associatio­n of Seafood Producers on Thursday accused the protesters of spreading “propaganda and misinforma­tion.” The associatio­n said the demand by harvesters that government grant buying licences to new companies would have “detrimenta­l impacts on the local seafood processing sector, and the people of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.”

 ?? PAUL DALY, CP ?? John Efford Jr. addresses the fish harvesters gathered outside the Confederat­ion Building in St. John’s, N.L., on Friday.
PAUL DALY, CP John Efford Jr. addresses the fish harvesters gathered outside the Confederat­ion Building in St. John’s, N.L., on Friday.

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