Windsor Star

Mi'kmaq fishers plan for second lobster season

DFO says it plans to `uphold Fisheries Act'

- MICHAEL TUTTON

• Ottawa and a small Mi'kmaq community appear to be headed toward renewed tensions on the waters off southwest Nova Scotia as the First Nation plans another self-regulated lobster season.

The federal fisheries minister said Thursday that enforcemen­t officers will be in place in St. Marys Bay to “uphold the Fisheries Act” if Sipekne'katik fishers harvest lobster beginning on June 1.

Bernadette Jordan's comment came shortly before Chief Mike Sack held a news conference to say his band will operate a five-month season that will occur outside of the commercial season.

Sack said the plan envisions 15 to 20 boats setting 1,500 traps, with a midsummer closure during the moulting and reproducti­on season and its own enforcemen­t officials.

The band argues that a 1999 Supreme Court of Canada decision affirms its right to fish for a moderate livelihood when and where they wish, including outside of federally regulated commercial fishing seasons.

That decision was later clarified by the court, however, which said Ottawa could regulate the Mi'kmaq treaty right for conservati­on and other limited purposes.

Jordan said during a news conference she had negotiated agreements with other bands for a moderate livelihood fishery, and that she expects Indigenous fishers to have a federal licence before harvesting lobster this year.

“We have conservati­on and protection officers who are on the water ... making sure people are doing things within the conservati­on lens. They have a job to do and that's to uphold the Fisheries Act, and they will be there to do that job,” Jordan said.

An official with the federal Fisheries Department provided an emailed statement on Thursday stating the enforcemen­t will be “measured and appropriat­e” based on “the scale of the fishing activity and gravity of potential harm to the fishery.”

The band launched a moderate livelihood fishery last fall in St. Marys Bay, outside of the federal season and against the strong protests of inshore fishing groups, who fear the stock will be depleted as a result.

Members of the band encountere­d violence from non-indigenous residents, resulting in the destructio­n of a lobster pound and the burning of a band member's van.

Jordan released a plan in March outlining conditions for an Indigenous moderate livelihood fishery during commercial seasons.

The minister has repeatedly noted the principle of closed seasons exists for conservati­on purposes and has said her department will negotiate the distributi­on of commercial licences, which occur within existing seasons, tailored to the needs of each First Nation.

Listuguj First Nation, an Indigenous community in eastern Quebec, recently signed a five-year agreement with Ottawa last week to develop a collaborat­ive approach to governing the band's fisheries.

However, in his announceme­nt Thursday, Sack said talks with Ottawa had failed, and he said his band is relinquish­ing commercial licences issued by the Fisheries Department, preferring its own system of allocating licences and determinin­g fishing effort.

Sack says having a self-regulated fishery allows for more band members to fish, on a smaller scale, creating more work for the community 65 kilometres north of Halifax, which struggles with high rates of poverty.

He also said he expected that federal fishery officers might intervene. “It's nothing to look forward to I guess, but it's just the nature of the beast,” he said. The chief said he will be contacting the United Nations to ask it to send peacekeepe­rs to assist his people.

Asked about an offer from Ottawa to allow the band to fish in the neighbouri­ng district, known as lobster fishing area 35, in the spring and fall seasons, Sack said he rejected that proposal because it was unsuitable to his band.

“They wanted our people to fish within that season and that season wasn't going to work. For our people to go out there with 50 traps and try and compete with much bigger boats and 375 traps, there's no way that's going to work,” he said.

Inshore, commercial fishing associatio­ns have said that the second part of the Marshall decision makes it clear that Ottawa retains the right to regulate for conservati­on purposes.

The Unified Fisheries Conservati­on Alliance, an advocacy group representi­ng commercial harvesters, said in a release that commercial fishing by Indigenous and non-indigenous people “must be managed and harvested as one body of people for economic yield and sustainabi­lity of the fish and the environmen­t.”

THEY WANTED OUR PEOPLE TO FISH WITHIN THAT SEASON AND THAT SEASON WASN'T GOING TO WORK.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Michael Sack, right, chief of the Sipekne'katik First Nation, presents a lobster licence and trap tags to Randy Sack, son of the late Donald Marshall Jr., in Saulniervi­lle, N.S., as they launch their own self-regulated fishery last September.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Michael Sack, right, chief of the Sipekne'katik First Nation, presents a lobster licence and trap tags to Randy Sack, son of the late Donald Marshall Jr., in Saulniervi­lle, N.S., as they launch their own self-regulated fishery last September.

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