Mi'kmaw fishers looking for action, not words, from MPs on lobster dispute - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:52 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Indigenous

Mi'kmaw fishers looking for action, not words, from MPs on lobster dispute

Some Mi'kmaw lobster harvesters in Nova Scotia say they're paying more attention to the tides than to politicians in Ottawa debating theirfishery.

Ottawa's focus on defining moderate livelihood 'a red herring,' says lawyer from Supreme Court case

Mi'kmaw fishing captain Garrett Michael estimates he and his crew have lost up to 100 lobster traps to opposing fishers from nearby N.S. communities since the Mi'kmaw fishery launched in Saulnierville. (Nic Meloney/CBC)

Some Mi'kmaw lobster harvesters in Nova Scotia say they're paying more attention to the tides than to politicians in Ottawa debating theirfishery.

"I watched a bit,"said Garrett Michael of Sipekne'katik First Nation aboutMonday's emergency parliamentary debate, "but we were going out fishing at the same time."

Michael has been fishing in St. Mary's Bayunder a Mi'kmaw-regulated licence. Heestimates he and his crew have lost up to 100 lobster traps to opposing fishers from nearby Nova Scotian communities since the First Nation's fishery launched in September. Opposition to the fishery by commercial, non-Indigenous fishermen has led tosometimes violent clashes and asuspicious fire at a lobster pound used by some Mi'kmaw fishers.

Arvin Knockwood of Sipekne'katik,one of Michael's crewwho also tuned into the debate, said he's waiting for more from politicians than just dialogue.

"I pay attention, because it affects us all," Knockwood said.

"Until they actually do something, stop the other guys or actually protect us for once, they can talk all they want. Their actions wouldspeak louder, I'd say."

Arvin Knockwood caught some of the debate that happened Monday in Ottawa. 'Until they actually do something ... they can talk all the want. Their actions would speak louder, I'd say.' (Nic Meloney/CBC)

Knockwood has been fishing lobster in the commercial industryfor more than two years,and says he's confident he'll continue to harvest under the new fishery with or without permission from the federal government.

"They can't take away our treaty right," he said.

"We're going to keep practising it until they recognize it and enforce it. We're going tokeep doing what we're doing."

Sipekne'katik Chief Mike Sack echoedthat sentiment, tellingreporters Tuesdaythat the First Nation will "keepworking through it, regardless of what happens in Parliament."

"I watched some of it, and there was some great dialogue," Sack said of the debate,adding he thought it was "unfortunate"that some members of Parliamentshared inaccurate information about the health of the fishery, and that they do not respect treaty rights. Hedid not provide thenames of theMPs he was referring to.

Garrett Michael of Sipekne'katik First Nation has been fishing in St. Mary's Bay under a Mi'kmaw-regulated licence. (Nic Meloney/CBC)

'Red herring' in the lobster debate

Parliamentarians spoke often of the Marshall decision the Supreme Court casethat affirmed theMi'kmawright to earn a "moderate livelihood" by fishing and selling their catch and repeatedly expressed concerns over the lack of clarity on what a "moderate livelihood" shouldmean.

Bruce Wildsmith,Donald Marshall Jr.'s lawyer in the landmark case, said the debate revealed that there is still a cloud of uncertainty surrounding the issue in Ottawa.

"Ithink they're not providing enough transparency to the Mi'kmaw community about where they're trying to take this and why it's any different than where they've taken it in New Brunswick," said Wildsmith.

The Mi'kmaw communities ofElsipogtog and Esgenopetitj in New Brunswicksettled moderate livelihood negotiations in August.

Wildsmithsaidthe Mi'kmaqmust be allowed to fish unhindered before governmentscanpin down the actual value of the fishery, so he takesissue withthe politicians' focus on determininga dollar value forthe living salary aharvester has the right to make on the water.

"It's a little bit of a red herring," he said.

"What is clear is that the Mi'kmaw fishers are not getting wealthy. They're not reaching the commercial level.The idea of coming up with a number at this point in time is premature."

Wildsmith said the debate signalledsome momentum that may lead to "a major step forward" for the implementation of the Mi'kmaw treaty right, but that he wasn't confident the federal government will diverge from years of similar debates.

"I'm hesitant to put it this way, but it takes a crisis to move the government," he said.

"Successive governments for 21 years have said, 'We'll talk, we'll talk, we'll talk,' and there's no urgency to get to a resolution."

Fishery will 'open doors'

Prior to the Marshall decision in 1999,and since, Mi'kmaw harvesterAlexander McDonaldof Sipekne'katikhas been on the front lines of the dispute.He began working in the lobster industry as a teenager, and has been involved in most of the fishing disputes involving Mi'kmaw harvesters in the region.

"I was watching [the emergency debate]and I found that there was a lot of truth in some of the things that were being said," he said.

"But then, there were a lot of biased opinions in the way they said it."

McDonald holds one of Sipekne'katik's"moderate livelihood" licencesand is currently working in another lobster fishing area under a commercial licence. He said he thinks most Mi'kmaw fishers on the water are tired of hearing their rights debated by non-Indigenous peoples and politicians.

"You got to remember there's a lot of prejudice, a lot of 'cowboys and Indians' hereand right across Canada," he said.

There is a silver lining in having the issue debated in Parliament and "at least looked at" by the federal government, McDonald said, because it may result in better access to fishing and a steady livelihood for the upcoming generation.

"A lot of our young people are more ambitious, better educated, and they want to fish. They want to get out there and they want to make a living," he said.

"They're being very responsible and this is a very positive thing, and it's going to open a lot of doors."