Vancouver Sun

Province's chiefs unload on cabinet ministers over salmon protection

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com

The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs' leadership pushed federal and provincial cabinet ministers on Friday for more urgent action on salmon conservati­on.

Among their demands was progress on Ottawa's contentiou­s promise to remove open-net salmon farms from the waters of the Discovery Islands off the coast of central Vancouver Island.

Chiefs attending the UBCIC council meeting said dwindling salmon runs have hit their communitie­s hard.

People haven't been able to fish in recent years and have resorted to spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy salmon from Alaska for food, ceremonial and social purposes.

Chief Bob Chamberlin, chairman of the group Wild First, said there likely isn't a single healthy salmon run on the Fraser River, underlinin­g the state of crisis, and argues for quicker action to remove farms from the Discovery Islands, which are in the migration path of most Fraser River salmon runs. Chamberlin said “both the federal and provincial government­s have made very public statements about working with First Nations on the transition of fish farms and the rehabilita­tion and rebuilding of salmon runs,” but have so far limited that participat­ion to technical groups.

Chamberlin said First Nations need to work harder at engaging ministers at the political level, because technical staff, particular­ly at Fisheries and Oceans Canada are “hiding science, they're misreading science,” when it comes to briefing ministers on risks posed by salmon farms.

Federal Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray said acting on the federal promise to get salmon farms out of the ocean is complex, given a legal challenge by aquacultur­e companies seeking a judicial review and “there may just be some opposing views in this room as to how this transition should look.”

Murray, who appeared online as a guest at the chiefs meeting along with provincial Resource Stewardshi­p Minister Josie Osborne and Fin Donnelly, a provincial parliament­ary secretary, said sustainabl­e aquacultur­e has a role to play in “feeding a hungry planet.”

“However, the growth of this industry cannot come at the expense of wild salmon or the health of local marine environmen­ts,” Murray said. Murray added government has made salmon conservati­on “a top priority,” with its $647-million commitment to the Pacific salmon strategy initiative, which she promised will be undertaken with traditiona­l Indigenous knowledge in planning and decision making. Chiefs expressed frustratio­n at the social impact dwindling salmon stocks are having on communitie­s that can no longer engage in traditiona­l fisheries.

Federal authoritie­s need to start justifying their infringeme­nts on Aboriginal rights by not protecting salmon, Chief Byron Louis of the Okanagan Indian Band said, with recent court decisions putting conditions beyond “the age of consultati­on and accommodat­ion, with those decisions, we're now in the age of damages.

I see that we need to take these guys to court. Let's not sit around waiting here before it's too late.

ARNOLD LAMPREAU

“And this is considerab­le,” Louis added, referring to the impact of decisions such as the B.C. Supreme Court's Yahey decision, which deemed the Blueberry River First Nation's Treaty 8 rights were infringed by the cumulative impacts of industrial developmen­t.

Chief Arnie Lampreau of the Shackan First Nation talked about spending money for the first time last year — $750,000 — to buy fish for eight Shackan communitie­s, when he could recall being able to fish for ample salmon decades ago.

Lampreau said he could recall having the same conversati­ons about the need to protect wild salmon when he sat on fisheries committees in the early 2000s, and “the only thing that has changed is that we have less fish in our rivers.”

“I see that we need to take these guys to court,” Lampreau said. “Let's not sit around waiting here before it's too late. If I've got to pay $750,000 a year to buy fish for my people, I'm going to spend that much money in court when our families can no longer go down to the river and fish freely to exercise their rights.”

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