BTW we do have a right to fish and hunt in BC according to the The Hunting and Fishing Heritage Act, SBC 2002, c 79. It's law and you can find it here.
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Overview of the Hunting and Fishing Heritage Act, SBC 2002, c 79
This is a short, symbolic provincial statute in British Columbia, assented to on November 26, 2002. It consists of a single operative section (section 1) and a preamble of "whereas" clauses that recognize the cultural and practical value of hunting and fishing. The full text is publicly available on the BC Laws website and CanLII.
Key Provisions
Section 1: "A person has the right to hunt and fish in accordance with the law."
This is the entire substantive content of the Act. It affirms that hunting and fishing are legitimate activities but explicitly ties any "right" to compliance with existing laws and regulations (e.g., the federal Fisheries Act, BC's Wildlife Act, and related regulations on licences, seasons, quotas, and conservation).
Preamble Highlights (non-binding but illustrative of legislative intent):
Hunting and fishing are "an important part of British Columbia's heritage" and "form an important part of the fabric of present-day life."
Hunters and anglers "contribute to the understanding, conservation, and management of fish and wildlife."
These activities "should be recognized as legitimate forms of recreation and as legitimate tools with which to effectively manage the fish and wildlife of British Columbia."
Does It Create a Guaranteed Share or Allocation for Recreational Fishermen?
No. This Act does not impose any legal obligation on the Crown (federal or provincial government) to allocate a specific share, quota, or portion of fish to recreational (or any other) users. Here's why, in the context of our ongoing discussion:
It's Declaratory and Symbolic, Not Enforceable:
The "right" in section 1 is qualified by "in accordance with the law," meaning it doesn't override or expand existing regulations. You still need a licence, must follow bag limits, seasons, and closures, and have no veto over government decisions on resource allocation.
Courts treat such statutes as statements of policy or heritage recognition, not as creating new property rights or entitlements in public resources like fish (which, as we discussed, are Crown-owned). No BC or Canadian case law interprets this Act as granting a fixed recreational quota—it's been cited in minor policy discussions but never successfully in challenges to fishery allocations.
No Impact on Allocation Priorities:
As confirmed by Supreme Court precedents (e.g., R. v. Gladstone, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 723), the Crown retains full discretion to prioritize conservation, Indigenous rights, and then allocate remaining resources among sectors (commercial, recreational, etc.) as it sees fit. This Act doesn't alter that hierarchy or mandate a minimum recreational share.
In practice, recreational fishing opportunities in BC are managed through the Freshwater Fishing Regulations Synopsis (provincial) and federal DFO tidal regulations, which can change annually based on stock assessments—without any statutory floor for recreational access under this Act.
Related Developments and Context:
Amendments: There have been unsuccessful private member's bills (e.g., Bill M 214-2019 and M 211-2018) to tweak section 1 by adding "subject to conservation and public safety law," but these didn't pass and wouldn't have changed the core meaning.
Broader "Right to Roam" Proposals: Bills like M 223-2017 (Right to Roam Act) proposed expanding public access to waterways for "lawfully fishing with rod and line" and even repealing this Act, but they also failed. These highlight ongoing political interest in recreational access but confirm it's not a guaranteed right.
Comparison to Other Jurisdictions: Similar laws exist elsewhere (e.g., Alberta's Hunting, Fishing and Trapping Heritage Act, which also just affirms rights "within provisions of the law"). They're heritage nods, not quota guarantees.
Bottom Line for BC Recreational Anglers
This Act is a feel-good recognition of fishing's cultural role—it validates your interest in the sport but doesn't give you (or recreational users collectively) any enforceable claim to a "share" of the fish. If DFO or BC reduces recreational quotas for conservation or other reasons, you can't point to this statute in court to demand otherwise. For real influence on allocations, advocacy through groups like the Sport Fishing Institute of BC (SFI) or direct input to fisheries consultations is more effective than relying on this 2002 heritage declaration.
If you're looking for the latest 2025-2027 fishing regs or licence info, check the BC government's Freshwater Fishing Synopsis or DFO's site. Let me know if you want details on a specific fishery!