Mtis federation reopens some moose harvesting areas to Mtis hunters after 9 years - Action News
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Manitoba

Mtis federation reopens some moose harvesting areas to Mtis hunters after 9 years

The Manitoba Metis Federation is reopening some Manitoba regions to Mtis moose harvesters, after a nine-year hiatus due to concerns about moose populations.

Porcupine Mountain, Duck Mountain areas and Nopiming area closed to Mtis hunters since 2011

A mother moose and a young moose stand in a grassy area with trees in the background
The Manitoba Metis Federation is reopening some Manitoba regions to Mtis moose harvesters, with limitations in some areas. (Jim Cole/The Associated Press)

The Manitoba Metis Federation is reopening some Manitoba regions to Mtis moose harvesters, after a nine-year hiatus due to concerns about moose populations.

Mtis harvesters will be allowed to return to limited hunting of bull moosein the Porcupine Mountain and Duck Mountain areas in western Manitoba starting Oct. 1, the federation said in a news release Tuesday. Cows, calves and yearlings will still be off-limits in those areas, officially known as Game Hunting Areas13,13A ,18, 18A, 18B and18C.

The federation will issue a limited number oftags to groups no smaller than four, permitting each group to harvest one moose each, MMF president David Chartrand said in a video address Tuesday.

A total of 24 tags will be issued in the area 16 in the Duck Mountain area and eight in the Porcupine Mountain area for a maximum harvest of 24 bull moose in the region.

"Conservation will always be a fundamental principle of our harvesting laws," Chartrand said in the video address online.

The Nopiming area, beginning at the Ontario border just north of Whiteshell Provincial Park and stretching as far east as Traverse Bay, will be fully reopened to Mtis harvesters, the federation said. The northernmost part of thatarea, also called Game Hunting Area 26, is at Manigotagan.

The areas have been closed to Mtis harvesters since 2011, when the federation halted hunting as a precautionary measure following consultation with elders. On Tuesday, the federation said populations have grown since then.

"The Mtis government and the Metis Laws of the Harvest place a priority on conservation-minded harvesting. The MMF is seeking a cooperative approach with the province of Manitoba in these conservation efforts," federation president David Chartrand said in the release.

"We are now into the ninth year of closures and it is time for the harvest to continue in a monitored, responsible, collective manner. Indigenous peoples' rights to harvest for culture and food have constitutional priority over recreation hunters."

Other regions, including the Turtle Mountain area, will remain closed to Mtis hunters, the federation says, pending further investigation by the federation.

Mtis federation criticizes province

The Mtis federation's rules only apply to Mtis hunters, not First Nations hunters whohave Indian status or non-Indigenous hunters.

The hunting, fishing and trapping rights of Mtis people and First Nations people with Indian status are constitutionally protected in Canada, including in Manitoba.

The province of Manitoba does not currently allow hunting by licensed, non-Indigenous hunters in those areas and some others nearby, due to low moose population.

On Tuesday, the MMF criticized the provincial government for failing to work withMtis government on moose hunting in the province.

"For nearly a decade, the province of Manitoba has been announcing moose closures and talking about a moose management plan, but never meaningfully engaged and consulted the Mtis Government on the closures and plans," saidLeah LaPlante,MMFminister of natural resources.

A spokesperson for Manitoba Agriculture and Resource Development said while the province has a "long history of respectful consultations" with First Nations and Mtis communities onsustainable wildlife management,the province does not support the change.

Provincial survey results suggest moose populations haven't recovered as well as anticipated, the spokesperson said in an email Wednesday,although the province believes a "limited harvest opportunity" would not jeopardize long-term recovery.

The province is in the process of contacting communities to arrange interim moose hunting opportunities for this fall.