Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance pushes for courts to
decide on scope of rights established in Marshall Decisions
HALIFAX, NS,
June 24,
2024 /CNW/ - A Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge has
granted a joint request from the Sipekne'katik First Nation and the
Attorney General of Canada to
adjourn trial dates that would have aimed to settle treaty fishing
rights disputes. The court has decided to give the involved parties
until December 12, 2024, to have a
defined and active mediation process in place, if not, proceeding
with litigation would be re-examined.
The Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance (UFCA), which
represents the interests of its members who are commercial fishers
in the Gulf and Maritimes regions, asserts that the courts must
finally decide the scope of Marshall rights for Indigenous Peoples.
"The fact that the Sipekne'katik First Nation is attempting to
settle treaty fishing rights issues outside of court is a historic
precedent considering the court system has been at the center of
Indigenous claims to the fishery and rights in particular for
decades," said Colin Sproul,
President of the UFCA. "The UFCA has been front-and-center
asserting that fishery rights need to be defined by the courts and
everyone, including Indigenous Peoples, must work within
science-based established fishing seasons set by the need to
conserve and manage the commercial fishery for everyone. The
decision by Sipekne'katik First Nation to abandon the expedited
Court process is an admission that the claims made that the
Fisheries Act provisions on the need for licenses, fishing within
defined seasons and overall management of the lobster fishery
didn't apply to moderate livelihood. That is a victory for
the UFCA and its membership".
"Harvesters and Indigenous Peoples have to know precisely
whether we have rules and what the rules of the game are,"
according to Sproul.
Governments have consistently been on the public record
asserting that any fishing effort must take place within
scientifically established fishing seasons. "This is about a
sustainable and conservation-based commercial fishery with seasons
and rules enforced by DFO," according to Sproul.
The courts must better define the scope of the rights that is
spoken about in the two Marshall
decisions. The parameters and breadth of the rights has been
consistently misinterpreted and misconstrued over the past twenty
five years by politicians and bureaucrats alike to fit or push an
agenda of their making. The court is the only body that will
deliver an unbiased decision and direction to follow.
The UFCA is committed to bringing a resolution to this
long-standing issue of Indigenous rights within the commercial
fishery. The UFCA will continue to explore any and all legal
avenues to finally bring clarity to this matter for the benefit of
non-indigenous and indigenous fisherman and their communities.
For more information on the activities of the UFCA
visit https://www.ufca.ca/
UNIFIED FISHERIES CONSERVATION
ALLIANCE
The Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance (UFCA) is an
alliance of commercial fishery stakeholders calling on the
Government of Canada to establish
clear, lasting, responsible, regulatory oversight for all fisheries
– commercial, food, social, and ceremonial.
Established in November 2020, the
UFCA represents thousands of independent, multi-species commercial
fishermen, and fishery associations from across the Maritimes. Our
membership also includes small to medium sized businesses that are
directly or indirectly tied to the Atlantic Canadian commercial
fishery.
SOURCE Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance