More Legalities...
Immoral: (ih-mawr-uhl) 1. violating moral principles; not conforming to the patterns of conduct usually accepted or established as consistent with principles of personal and social ethics.
2. licentious or lascivious.
Illegal: (ih-lee-guhl)
1. forbidden by law or statute.
2. contrary to or forbidden by official rules, regulations, etc.
By definition it can be seen that the two are very closely intertwined. So, as you wander through the various literature's cited, I'll leave the matter of which definition that each may be more closely related to up to the reader...
DFO's Mandate is centered on these principles: biological conservation, economic efficiency and social concern for the benefit of present and future generations.
It would strongly appear that the principles of "economic efficiency", "social concern" and "the benefit of present and future generations" was not adhered to by Minister Shea by actively promoting the further privatization of this particular (halibut) fishery, nor a consideration in the ongoing development of that same privatization in most marine fisheries. While some may wish to argue the point, methinks most understand the economic role recreational fishing carries far surpasses that of the commercial operations; that the social concern amongst the vastly larger user group has reached unprecedented levels; and that the wisest use, therefore benefits for today's and future generations relies heavily upon equitable access.
So, with that addressed (immoral yes, illegal - likely) let's get on with what the Professionals in these matters have to offer:
"Canada’s fisheries are a “common property resource”, belonging to all the people of Canada. Under the Fisheries Act, it is the Minister’s duty to manage, conserve and develop the fishery on behalf of Canadians in the public interest"
http://scc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/1997/1997scr1-12/1997scr1-12.html"The constitutionally entrenched
Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada has a strong non-discrimination clause that offers individuals "... the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination...."
Certainly, the case can be made that in Canada, as in Iceland, ITQ provisions have discriminated in favor of particular groups in the fishery, allowing them substantial wealth benefits from the public fishery resource, at the expense of others."
http://www.google.ca/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=13&ved=0CCAQFjACOAo&url=http%3A%2F%2Fciteseerx.ist.psu.edu%2Fviewdoc%2Fdownload%3Fdoi%3D10.1.1.152.8852%26rep%3Drep1%26type%3Dpdf&rct=j&q=Canada%20Supreme%20Court%20Common%20Property%20Fish&ei=pr5qTYaIM4eesQOU6dSEAg&usg=AFQjCNEA8z-y1KwOeF0qiMJEJ88nwj2Utg&cad=rja"A major objective of Canadian fisheries policy is to ensure that allocation of fishery resources will be on the basis of
equity, taking into account adjacency to the resource, the
relative dependence of coastal communities, and the various fleet sectors (impacts) upon a given resource, and economic efficiency and fleet mobility."
"The management process for halibut has successfully accomplished the goal of maintaining the productivity of the stock but has
failed miserably in managing the fishery or the people harvesting the resource to achieve an efficient use of human and capital resources"
http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/en/CAN/body.htm"The third major principle that comes into play is equity, or, the
equitable allocation of access rights among competing interest in accordance with government policy... Of equal importance is the notion that fishery is a common, public resource that should be managed in a way that does not create or exacerbate excessive interpersonal or interregional disparities.
http://www.caricom-fisheries.com/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=L8U3BuEh5LA%3D&tabid=198"Canada’s fisheries are a “common property resource”, belonging to all the people of Canada. Under the Fisheries Act, it is the Minister’s duty to manage, conserve and develop the fishery on behalf of all Canadians in the
best public interest"
http://scc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2008/2008scc58/2008scc58.html"The Crown is the steward of the resource for the public,
not its owner."
"It is recognized in Magna Carta. By reason of that statute, ". . .
no restriction can be put upon that right of the public by an exercise of the prerogative in the form of a grant or otherwise"http://www.aspercentre.ca/Assets/Asper+Digital+Assets/Supreme+Court/Kapp+Intervener+-+Sportfishing+Defence+Association+et+al.pdf"Concerning the owner-operator policy, I think government feels the same as we do: that an individual is given a license, and
that individual should be the one who fishes. That’s not what’s happening, of course. …
"I have said right from day one that fish in the ocean are a common property resource.
The resource is owned by all the people of Canada. We need to get it back into the hands of the people of Canada because we have not properly managed that over the years…"
Then DFO Minister Hearn:
http://www.ccpfh-ccpp.org/cgi-bin/Files/Vol2-Issue3%2CE.pdf"It may be observed that the notion of common access property rights operates at different scale levels. In Canada the federal government represents the ownership of tidewater fish resources in which all citizens of the country may thus claim an interest. Appropriately,
it is at this national level that the federal government recognizes universal citizen access to recreational fish resources."
"The nature of common property marine resources
precludes individualized assignments of full property rights to individual fish in the wild"
"In several of BC's fishery dependent communities there is an evidently high level of concern that
their interests have been severely harmed by recent rationalization matters to "privatize" fisheries access."
This paper has also drawn attention to continuing effects of a previous fisheries policy imbalance, where an exclusive focus on narrow considerations of economic efficiency led to the installation of fishery access rights based on such devices as ITQ's and stacked licenses...
Both devices have adverse social impacts. They lead to relatively high-level capitalization of fishing enterprises, tending to concentrate fishery access rights and rent capture (lease) opportunities disproportionately in the hands of well-heeled individuals and enterprises.
http://www.econ.sfu.ca/research/discussion/dp00-9.pdf"Some quota leasing is necessary, especially in BC’s integrated groundfish fishery, for conservation...
However, by far the greatest volume of leasing is motivated by lucrative quota lease fees. In some cases, processors even lease and then sublease quota, passing on all the costs to fishermen. Working fishermen are increasingly becoming “tenants” who pay exorbitant rents to landlords, or “sealords,” who own the quota. The lucrative leasing has, in turn, driven up the price of purchasing quota, making ownership prohibitively expensive for many fishermen.
"Privatization is probably the most controversial and convoluted issue in the ITQ debate.""Quota values are completely out of proportion to catch value.""High lease costs have had a
ruinous effective on the competitiveness of the BC halibut fishery."
http://www.ericennotamm.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/ITQ_Cautionary_Tale_FINAL2.pdfAnd last on this list (not exhaustive by any means) is the Judgment of the
Supreme Court of Canada wherein it is noted that the Government is
NOT legally authorized to transfer ownership of marine resources still "at sea" to anyone, under any circumstances. Something which the current ITQ system very much does.
Saulnier vs RBC:
http://scc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2008/2008scc58/2008scc58.htmlI would encourage you to take a moment and review each of the documents cited above. It will take a little time, but collectively they are very enlightening on the subject matter at hand...
Regardless of whether you prefer the "immoral" or "illegal" definition, it is more than apparent that the standing very much exists for a class-action lawsuit against DFO and the Federal government regarding the halibut fishery, and likely several more that are under current development. While the current politically oriented protest was and is an interesting experiment which continues, methinks it may eventually take intervention by the Supreme Court to put the matter to bed.
I still hold out hope that by working together we can forgo such a drastic turn of events. The Working Fishermen and the Recreational Sector have so much in common in this regard as to be considered nearly the same. I very much hope their are sufficient enlightened individuals within each of these sectors to begin the process of drastically needed positive change before the matter escalates even further into legal actions.
Cheers,
Nog