And a Paradigm Shift in the Allocation Policy Goes Hand in Hand:
A group of West Coast First Nations has won the right to harvest and sell fish commercially after a 12-year court battle.
In the 400-page judgment, Humphries sets out the parameters for the Indigenous fisheries involving species including a variety of salmon, groundfish, crab, prawn and shellfish.
https://www.castanet.net/edition/news-story-224196-3-.htm#224196Here follows the Minister's full statement. The most significant decision is NOT the court case, rather it is the Minister's reference to changing the allocation policy as soon as possible. Placing
FN Commercial rights above all others except FN FSC rights is a paradigm shift, and there aren't any more fish to go around... meaning many will soon be off the water to pay the cost of "
reconciliation"...
https://www.canada.ca/en/fisheries-oceans/news/2018/04/statement-from-the-minister-of-fisheries-oceans-and-the-canadian-coast-guard-following-the-bc-supreme-court-decision---ahousaht-indian-band-and-nat.htmlParagraph 1267 of the Judgment for reference:
Result[1267] I have set out several areas of unjustified infringements arising from the licencing regime above, in the section Aspects of Infringement and Justification Applying To All Species, as set out above. The following conclusions are specifically applicable to the salmon fishery:
The Salmon Allocation Policy insofar as it accords priority to the recreational fishery over plaintiffs’ right-based fishery for chinook is not justified;
Canada’s allocations for AABM and ISBM chinook, insofar as they have been set based on giving priority to the recreational fishery pursuant to the Salmon Allocation Policy, are not justified;
The use of PICFI to provide salmon licences to the plaintiffs is justified, but the mitigation policy itself, in the event of an inability to allocate sufficient chinook to the plaintiffs through PICFI alone, is not justified;
http://www.courts.gov.bc.ca/jdb-txt/sc/18/06/2018BCSC0633.htmSalmon, and other saltwater species fishing as we knew it, have just met their painful demise.
Sadly,
Nog