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Author Topic: FISHING RIGHTS Fishery stakeholders outraged at province for choosing to cut bai  (Read 2812 times)

chris gadsden

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PUBLICATION:
   

GLOBE AND MAIL
   

DATE:
   

2009.10.30

PAGE:
   

S3

BYLINE:
   

JUSTINE HUNTER

SECTION:
   

British Columbia N

EDITION:
   

Metro

DATELINE:
   

Victoria BC
   
   

BC Politics / DISPATCH / FISHING RIGHTS Fishery stakeholders outraged at province for choosing to cut bait on native case

JUSTINE HUNTER VICTORIA jhunter@globeandmail.com The fight for fishing rights in B.C. waters is at its most ferocious when the salmon are scarce. This fall, hungry grizzlies are having to get in line behind the gillnetters, sports fishermen and native communities getting their elbows up, once again, over the meagre bounty returning to coastal waters.

Against a backdrop of the collapse of the sockeye salmon run, the British Columbia Court of Appeal this week is hearing a native band's claim for priority over the commercial fishery on the North Coast.

The Lax Kw'alaams case could have huge implications for the fishing industry if it succeeds, but the provincial government has elected to sit on the sidelines.

The province's lawyer informed the other parties last week that B.C. would be asking the court to please excuse it, "as the province takes no position in the matters to which this hearing relates." It was a disappointing decision to stakeholders who were counting on B.C. to continue to backstop the federal government in fighting the Lax Kw'alaams in court. It may be disappointing to Ottawa, too: It is at least the second time this year that the province has left federal lawyers standing alone at the eleventh hour in a high-stakes native case.

It happened last March, while lawyers were preparing final arguments in Ahousaht v. Canada and B.C. Ottawa was furious, calling it an "unprecedented, unexpected and last-minute decision" that raised doubts about whether the province could be counted on to show up in court in other aboriginal rights cases.

In Ahousaht, which happens to be another native fishing rights case, the province was upfront that it was making a gesture of reconciliation with natives.

But in Lax Kw'alaams, the province is just being pragmatic, according to George Abbott, Minister for Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation.

B.C. has nothing to do with federal fisheries matters, Mr. Abbott said in an interview. "The federal government, I'm sure, would like to see us there defending their interest. But we have many battles to fight," he said.

Implicit in the decision, however, is a message to Ottawa that B.C. will not be there in aboriginal rights cases if it doesn't absolutely have to be. It's a subtle turn, perhaps deliberately underplayed because of Premier Gordon Campbell's history on the native fishing issue.

In 1997, then in opposition, he called on the government of the day to "stop this aboriginal-only fishing and start managing an all-Canadian fishery for all Canadians." As Premier, in 2001, he stated that he opposed "a separate, constitutionally entrenched, commercial fishery." Today, as Mr. Campbell admires the stunning new "leadership desk" installed in his office by native artist Arthur Vickers, he has reshaped his image into that of an advocate for aboriginal title pursuing a "New Relationship" with first nations.

Mr. Abbott did not want to say if the Premier still believes native-only fisheries are "morally and ethically" wrong.

"The B.C. government has moved beyond that position," he said.

But to hear him tell it, that's not because of any epiphany about how inflammatory the position is seen to be by native communities.

Rather, it's because the courts have approved limited native-only fisheries. "The constitutional and legal goalposts have moved," he said.

Commercial fisherman Phil Eidsvik of the B.C. Fisheries Survival Coalition called the province's non-response to the Lax Kw'alaams case "pathetic." He used stronger language in speaking of his former ally, Mr. Campbell. "Campbell lied to a whole industry, it's one reason one of us former Liberals sat out the election," he said.

Bill Otway of the Sportsfishing Defence Alliance provoked an angry reaction from Mr. Abbott this week when he argued the province has sold out the fishery by sitting out the case. He rejects the idea that B.C. could not participate.

"It's a critical case, whether British Columbians will have any rights or ownership of their natural resources. We're talking about a multibillion-dollar industry at stake and the province is saying, 'We don't care.' " There are few native leaders in B.C. who have spent more time with the Premier in recent years than Grand Chief Ed John of the First Nations Summit. He doesn't know if the province is sending a message by pulling out of Lax Kw'alaams because he doesn't know whether the Premier still opposes a separate, constitutionally entrenched commercial fishery.

But he said both B.C. and Ottawa will have to get over that opposition in order to settle land claims.

This summer, Chief John travelled the province to talk to native communities about land claims. What he heard about, everywhere, was fish. He recalled a native elder who told him she was worried about what her family would eat this winter. "She had 11 salmon she had to put up in her smokehouse that she bought from someone for $7 each. That was it - there was no other salmon for the community." The stage is set for a renewed clash on B.C.'s rivers, but Mr.

Campbell's government seems perfectly content, this time, to remain on shore.

***** Who owns the fish? The Lax Kw'alaams Indian Band is in court this week appealing a B.C. Supreme Court judgment that dismissed their claim for a broad aboriginal right to a commercial fishery.

Most of the 3,000 band members live on a reserve just 30 kilometres north of the fishing town of Prince Rupert. They claim - as descendants of the Coast Tsimshian tribes - fishing rights along the coast of northwestern British Columbia, and along the Lower Skeena and Nass Rivers, to harvest and sell fish on a commercial basis. In a good year, which this is not, salmon would be the most lucrative target.

But they also seek priority rights to halibut and herring.

Lawyers representing the federal and provincial governments argued in B.C. Supreme Court that the Coast Tsimshian did rely on all kinds of fish for sustenance, but, with the exception of oolichan, did not establish a substantive trade in fish.

In her 2008 judgment, Madam Justice Deborah Satanove found the band's claim "ignores the fundamental fact that the Coast Tsimshian fished for sustenance, not for trade." The B.C. Court of Appeal hearing is scheduled to wrap up today.

 

 

yamadirt 426

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All for 1 and 1 for all. Rules that is. A little civil war can make this happen.  >:( No one group should be a priority.  I'm getting sick of natives and all there whining.  ::) They are a drain on our provincial coffers. Just in case I'm labeled a bigot after this let me tell you I am a small part native / big part white and I hate everyone equally.  ;D If we all stood together and fought the real enemy (gov) we would have plenty of wild fish.
« Last Edit: November 02, 2009, 07:49:24 AM by yamadirt 426 »
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Sam Salmon

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Thanks for posting this Chris I missed it in the news.

In the end it's all for nought-the Salmon are running out everywhere and in a few decades what happened today will matter  very little-if at all.
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