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Judicial
Inquiry into Fraser River Fishery "Racist"
By Lloyd Dolha
Prime Minister Stephen Harper stunned BC aboriginal leaders in early
October at a First Nations Summit meeting when he re-affirmed his position
in opposing a "race-based" fishery on the West coast.
"To come into our territories and to openly state his racist assertions
is an affront to First Nations and a direct challenge to the courts,"
said Chief Judith Sayers, executive member of the First Nations Summit.
In reiterating his intentions during his Vancouver visit, the prime minister
said federal Fisheries minister Loyola Hearn is working on several initiatives
to reintegrate aboriginal and non-aboriginal fisheries. Harper also stated
that the constitutional rights of aboriginal people to a food fishery
will be respected and stressed that BC First Nations will get a decent
share of the commercial salmon fishery through treaties and other arrangements.
Harper had outraged aboriginal leaders nationally in July in a letter
to the Calgary Herald where he made his intentions known by stating,"
in the coming months, we will strike a judicial inquiry into the
collapse of the Fraser River salmon fishery and oppose racially divided
fishery."
The Aboriginal Fishing Strategy (AFS), the basis of the so-called "race-based"
fishery, was initiated in 1992, under the Mulroney Tory government. It
was in response to the 1990 Supreme Court of Canada decision in Sparrow,
which established the aboriginal right to fish for "food, ceremonial
and societal" purposes, second only to the conservation of the resource.
Sparrow had the effect of forcing the Department of Fisheries and Oceans
to act with respect to the aboriginal fisheries. A particularly significant
sentence from the Pearse-Larkin inquiry report clearly describes how the
decision radically altered DFO's managerial role.
"The Sparrow decision forced the government to respond to a partly-defined
and evolving aboriginal right to fish, protected by the Constitution,
without prejudicing the ultimate resolution of the issue.
Sparrow did not specifically address the issue of an aboriginal commercial
right to sell, but the AFS pilot sales program was developed and released
in a time of uncertainty when several court decisions were pending (Gladstone,
N.T.C. Smokehouse and Vanderpeet) that dealt specifically with the question
of an aboriginal right to the commercial sale of salmon.
Against this background, the department developed the AFS, which it considered
the federal government's response to the need to expand aboriginal peoples
role in the fisheries while, at the same time, conserving fish stocks
and maintaining a stable environment for resource sharing.
"In Sparrow, the court did not address the issue sales because they
said they weren't asked to. Also, the court did not address the issue
of a quota or harvest ceiling," said Ernie Crey, advisor to the Sto:lo
Tribal Council. "Because the court did neither, in the upper reaches
of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and amongst the major salmon
processors and throughout the salmon fleet, a sense of panic set in.
"In advance of 1992, they put their heads together to come up with
a plan to contain and control the aboriginal fishery - to cap any growth
in the number of fish taken by the aboriginal community in the province.
That plan became the Aboriginal Fishing Strategy," said Crey.
To accomplish this the department initiated a buy-back program of commercial
fishing licenses. Some 75 commercial fishing licenses were retired voluntarily
to offset the aboriginal allocation of about 800,000 fish.
Crey said Harper's call for a judicial inquiry is moot because there have
already been three inquiries into the Fraser River sockeye, whose recommendations
have yet to be fully implemented.
Those inquiries found any decline in salmon stocks were due to miscalculations
in the number of salmon returning to the spawning beds, higher water temperatures
and lower levels of water.
"The Sto:lo's official position is we're opposed to an judicial inquiry,
because, as I said, there have been three previous inquiries," said
Crey. "It will also be very costly. We're told in excess of $20 million."
The AFS is also supported in case law. In the most recent decision, June
2006, the BC Court of Appeal decided in Kapp, that allocations for commercial
purposes is not discriminatory and represents a legitimate policy decision
that is well within the authorities in the fisheries legislation.
"There is little support from First Nations, industry, sports and
environmental groups for yet another inquiry of the Fraser River fishery,"
said AFN regional chief Cliff Atleo.
"If the Harper government is truly financially accountable, rather
than spend millions of dollars on anther inquiry, use those funds to sustain
the fishery by enhancing fisheries management, scientific research and
recovery efforts of endangered runs such as the Cultus, Early Stuart ands
Sakinaw Lake sockeye."
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