:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number eight of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans. Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, October 19, 2020, the committee is resuming its study of the implementation of Mi'kmaq treaty fishing rights to support a moderate livelihood.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of September 23, 2020. The proceedings will be made available via the House of Commons website. So that you are aware, the webcast will always show the person speaking, rather than the entirety of the committee. To ensure an orderly meeting, I would like to outline a few rules to follow.
Members and witnesses may speak in the official language of their choice. Interpretation services are available for this meeting. You have the choice at the bottom of your screen of floor, English or French.
For members participating in person, proceed as you usually would when the whole committee is meeting in person in the committee room. Keep in mind the directives from the Board of Internal Economy regarding masking and health protocols.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name. If you are on the video conference, please click on the microphone icon to unmute your mike. For those in the room, your microphone will be controlled as normal by the proceedings and verification officer. I remind everyone that all comments by members and witnesses should be addressed through the chair.
When you are not speaking, your mike should be on mute. I can't say that often enough.
With regard to a speaking list, the committee clerk and I will do the best we can to maintain a consolidated order of speaking for all members, whether they are participating virtually or in person.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses. We have the Honourable Bernadette Jordan, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard. With her, also from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, we have Timothy Sargent, deputy minister; Sylvie Lapointe, assistant deputy minister of fisheries and harbour management; Doug Wentzell, associate regional director general, Maritimes region; and Robert Lamirande, senior adviser.
We will now proceed with opening remarks.
Minister Jordan, please go ahead for seven minutes or less.
It is great to be back here at the fisheries and oceans committee, so thank you to you and the committee members for inviting me. As you said, I am here today because I want to be part of this very important discussion we are having. I am accompanied today by, as you mentioned, my deputy minister, Timothy Sargent; Doug Wentzell, the associate regional director general for the maritime region; Robert Lamirande, senior adviser for indigenous relations; and Sylvie Lapointe, assistant deputy minister, fisheries and harbour management.
I understand that the study currently under way was put forward by MP Battiste and I appreciate the testimony that the committee has heard so far from first nations leadership, industry representatives and academics. All their voices are important to this discussion, and this is a conversation that Canadians need to hear.
Since being appointed to Fisheries and Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard portfolio in December 2019, I have continued to build on the progress of my predecessors, Minister Jonathan Wilkinson and Minister Dominic LeBlanc, and I've been working with first nations to further implement their treaty right to fish in pursuit of a moderate livelihood.
When Canadians elected a Liberal government in 2015, after 10 years of Harper Conservatives putting reconciliation on the back burner, our government took action and expanded the mandate for moderate livelihood negotiations. These changes led to two rights and reconciliation agreements being signed in 2019, which further implemented the treaty right to fish, as affirmed by the Marshall decision.
While discussions on advancing this treaty right have been taking place regularly, recent events in Nova Scotia highlight the complex issues around the implementation of the Mi'kmaq, Maliseet and the Peskotomuhkati Nation at Skutik historic treaty right. They are a stark reminder that we must continue to do more and to work together.
Our government remains focused and committed to the work we do with first nations to implement their constitutionally protected Supreme Court affirmed right, while ensuring that fisheries remain safe, productive and sustainable for all harvesters. But there are no quick or easy solutions. This takes time and patience, and there will be challenges along the way. However, that cannot deter us from moving forward
We are also continuing our efforts to de-escalate the tensions on the ground by engaging all parties in constructive dialogue. On that front, I have met and will continue to meet regularly with both indigenous leadership and commercial harvesters.
During these discussions we have heard the frustrations from both parties. First nations are frustrated that negotiations have taken too long and that there is a lack of real progress to implement their right. Non-indigenous harvesters are concerned about the future of the fishery and what it means for their livelihoods.
That is why, along with , our government recently appointed a federal special representative, Allister Surette. He is a neutral third party who is working to foster dialogue and rebuild trust between indigenous and commercial harvesters.
This is a structured forum for Mr. Surette to gather different perspectives and address real questions and concerns, with the goal of building a greater understanding. He will provide recommendations to the government on ways to move forward.
Commercial fishers and first nations have fished side by side for generations, and communities need to come together again. We need to ensure that treaty rights are implemented and the fisheries remain productive for all harvesters.
As the representative undertakes his work, nation-to-nation discussions with first nations on a path forward will continue.
While I cannot speak to the details of these discussions, I believe there has been progress, and I am having productive conversations with many first nations regarding proposed fishing plans in the short and the longer term.
I also want to touch on the issue of conservation as I understand it has been raised a few times at this committee.
I would like to say very clearly that conservation underpins everything we do. Lobster stocks are healthy and we will never move forward with a plan that threatens the health of this species or any other species.
I know that this approach is shared with many of the first nations leaders I speak with regularly. It is also shared very strongly by harvesters in the commercial industry who, over generations, have worked in partnership with DFO to develop conservation practices and regulations that have helped build the stock to the healthy levels we have today. We will not jeopardize that progress.
I will continue to make every effort with industry to increase transparency, formalize the lines of communication and ensure that industry has meaningful opportunities to share their concerns and express their views.
My department, this government and I remain committed to working with first nations leaders to implement their treaty rights.
I will now be pleased to take any of your questions.
Thank you.
:
Actually, Mr. Bragdon, I have been extremely engaged on this file since I was first appointed minister.
With regard to Premier McNeil's comments, we believe this is a nation-to-nation negotiation. We will continue to work with first nations to make sure we implement their treaty right. However, I do recognize that commercial harvesters have concerns and that is why I have continued to meet with them as well.
One of the reasons we appointed the special representative was that we have heard that commercial harvesters feel they wanted to have a stronger way to communicate with DFO. This third party person will be able to help us move forward.
With regard to the premier's comments, no, I believe we are doing everything we possibly can to make sure that we implement this treaty right.
Committee members, what we're talking about here has not been weeks in the making or months in the making. This is 400 years of a relationship between two nations. For most of the first 200 years it was about creating treaties to resolve crises and to live in harmony with one another. For the past 200 years, unfortunately, it has been about treaty denial.
Minister, I want to start off by thanking you not only for coming before us but also for all of your work. I know we've had many conversations and you have had many conversations with Mi'kmaq stakeholders and non-Mi'kmaq stakeholders.
At the heart of this matter is 200 years of injustice. What we're trying to figure out is a way to navigate for the next 200 years, God willing. I realize this is a heavy burden to place on any minister, any person. I also realize that DFO and the RCMP have a difficult burden and responsibility to act in accordance with evolving legal principles such as the honour of the Crown and reconciliation when dealing with indigenous nations.
With that in mind, Minister, this study is all about trying to make recommendations to move forward on that path together towards reconciliation. I'm wondering if there's anything you can talk to us about, some of the complexities that you've found since taking on your role as minister.
:
Well, thank you, Mr. Battiste. I would also like to thank you for your advocacy on this and for helping to educate people on this issue. It is a very big issue.
As I've said many times, if there were a simple solution to this long-standing issue, it would have been solved 21 years ago, but there is not. It's very complex. One challenge we face is the whole idea of defining what a moderate livelihood is. I feel that is one of the biggest things we're dealing with. It's different for everybody. What a moderate livelihood is in one community is very different from what a moderate livelihood is in another community. What we need to do, as the Crown or as the government, is to make sure we're listening to those communities.
As you've said, we need to find a path forward for the next 200 years. That path forward has to include first nations communities. I think that for too long we have, over years, built systems that did not include them, and we need to make sure that we do. As we go forward it's going to be extremely important for us to listen to all of the communities involved. Every one of them has a different thought on what a moderate livelihood looks like.
I've been told many times or asked many times, “Why don't you just define the right and then it's done?” I don't think the first nations communities want the Government of Canada to tell them what their moderate livelihood right is. This is something that has to come from the first nations. This is something that has to come through the negotiations. This is something that has to come from ongoing conversations. That is what I am absolutely committed to doing. I see that the only way for us to move forward is through those conversations.
Minister, many have come before this committee with great fears about the future of the industry. Many argue out there and speculate, as they did 20 years ago, that accommodating a Mi'kmaq moderate livelihood fishery would ruin the fishing industry in the Atlantic.
Last week a major development happened when a Mi'kmaq coalition led by Chief Terry Paul in Membertou announced plans to buy Clearwater, the largest fishing company in Canada. The coalition borrowed millions and will be paying off this loan for the next 25 to 30 years.
Minister, do you feel the Mi'kmaq coalition investment of a quarter of a billion dollars into the fishing industry will ease some of the concerns about Mi'kmaq fishermen depleting the very resource that they have just invested so heavily in?
Thank you, Minister Jordan, for being here today. I hope that you've had a good first year in office since last November.
I have several questions for you. As you know, many witnesses have appeared before us. We have a lot of ideas. People don't necessarily agree on everything, as you can certainly imagine. You said that the key issue that we're facing right now is how to define “moderate livelihood”. For some people, this concept can be defined, while for others it can't be defined. You said that you couldn't necessarily comment on this. The first nations themselves must say what they want.
I want to know whether your department has tried to hold discussions with the first nations affected by the Marshall decision in order to come up with this definition. Could you provide some figures? We know that 32 first nations were affected, but which ones are we talking about? Even though we can't know everything being said—I won't ask you for the definition put forward by each one—I want to know what efforts have been made. Are we on our way to a definition in the case of some first nations?
:
Thank you very much, Madam Gill, for the questions.
First of all, I'd like to say that over the past 21 years, since Marshall, there has been a lot of work done to implement the Marshall decision, to work to make sure that first nations have access to the fishery. There have been a number of investments made to make sure that there has been access through licences, through boats, through training and through gear, so that first nations communities do have an ability to fish.
I will say that in 1999 the landing value for the first nations fishery was about $3 million. Last year that landing value was $120 million, so there has been progress made to making sure that first nations have access to the fishery.
With regard to the definition of a moderate livelihood, I think the big thing here to remember is that we've built systems as governments throughout history that did not include the Mi'kmaq or first nations in those systems. We need to make sure that what we're doing now is allowing the first nations to define the moderate livelihood for themselves. This can't be a top-down approach from government. This has to be something that comes directly from the Mi'kmaq. Although everyone seems to think it would be a much easier solution if the government just had a definition and then put everybody in place, I don't believe that's the best way forward.
:
I'm sorry. I apologize for misunderstanding the question.
Absolutely there has been progress made in the last three years, since we had a new mandate in 2017 to negotiate.
There have been three agreements signed—two in New Brunswick, one in Quebec—with first nations communities to get them to a moderate livelihood fishery. There are ongoing discussions with other communities to make sure they have their right. We've been reviewing fishing plans that have been supplied to us from first nations communities. We're working with those communities to implement the right, but we want to make sure that the fishery is productive as well as sustainable for everybody.
Right now the fishing plans that we have.... We've asked communities to give them to us. We have a number of them. We are reviewing them, and we will be working with the communities to make sure that those fishing plans are implemented.
:
No, you caught me off guard, Chair. I wasn't ready, but thanks for getting me in now.
Madam Minister, it's actually a bit ironic, even hypocritical, to sit here and listen to some of the questions from the Conservatives, the official opposition, criticizing you on your approach. You've been the minister for one year versus the period from 2006-15 when the former Conservative government was basically absent on this file and kicked it down the road. As well, you may be able to refresh the memories of some members of the committee here on what the former government's approach was as it relates to enforcement, with cutbacks in that area that led us to some of the issues we have today. You can do that in your answer.
You gave a good statistic where you gave the value of the first nations fishery today versus 2019. We've been hearing from witnesses on this committee, and there appears to be a view held that there's been no access since Marshall in 2019. I know you won't have it here, but could you give a brief overview, and provide to the committee a detailed listing of the access to various fishery stocks first nation community by first nation community so we can see exactly what progress has been made over those years?
Conservation underpins everything we do at DFO. Making sure that the stocks, which are healthy right now, remain healthy for generations and sustainable for long-term fisheries is critical. That's not only for commercial harvesters, but for first nations as well. Everybody has the same goal here. Nobody wants to see the stocks depleted. Every decision that I make with regard to agreements, with regard to making sure we're moving forward in a positive way, will always have conservation at the head of it. We'll always have conservation and make sure that we have a long-term, sustainable industry.
As you know yourself, Mr. Morrissey, in your area, we rely on it here in Atlantic Canada. The lobster fishery has to be something that we continue to work on to make sure it is there for years and generations to come.
Perhaps some witnesses who participated in the various consultations will agree. I realize that we're getting very vague responses.
We were told earlier that “moderate livelihood” couldn't be defined, because the first nations must provide the definition. We're now being told that the agreements signed with the Maliseet of Viger, for example, are having a positive impact and that the measures under way are also having a positive impact. I have trouble taking a position on this issue. I imagine that the first nations are also having trouble.
I want to hear the minister talk about initiatives, for example. She spoke about initiatives described as positive, including the Marshall decision and the agreement with the Maliseet people. However, people from the first nations are saying that they don't necessarily want commercial fishing.
How can you explain the fact that your statements don't necessarily align with what the first nations want in terms of the proposal and the organization of various programs, for example?
Hello, colleagues, and hello, Minister. It's good to see all of you and the minister as well today.
I have a quick statement and then a couple of questions on conservation.
This gives me an opportunity to give a special shout-out to the commercial fishers in Cape Breton—Canso, who have been demonstrating leadership during a complex, challenging and nuanced time. The same would be said to the three Mi'kmaq communities in my riding.
I want to go on the stream, I guess, of conservation. A few of us have talked about it today.
We've heard here at this committee that the lobster stocks cannot support a moderate livelihood, and that commercial fishers' largest concern—and I've heard this, too, through many meetings I've had—is having a fishery that lasts for generations. Could you tell us about the state of lobster stocks?
The second question is this, Minister. On your statement on Friday around this issue, I'm wondering if you could explain the status of the lobster in St. Peters Bay in my riding and the context of that.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Kelloway.
It is a very challenging and very complex issue. I've said many, many times that if it were simple, it would have been solved over the last 21 years. We have, a number of times, made incremental progress in making sure that first nations have access, but we've never actually worked to a point where we have been able to implement the right. The right looks different from community to community. It can't be something on which the government just goes in and puts its foot down and says, “This is what a moderate livelihood looks like.” It has to be done with the communities. They have to be ready to have those conversations. They have to be willing to talk to us about what they see as their way forward.
A lot of really good hard work has gone into the fishing plans that we have received so far, which will show us the path forward. I'm looking forward to actually getting some understanding with these communities on these agreements.
:
I didn't say lawless. I said the laws as they pertain to our country. It is the responsibility of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to enforce that.
When I first came on to this committee today, I was hoping to hear some assurances that communities throughout our region would take from your testimony. In fact, I get the impression that everything seems to be going just great from the perspective of yourself and other members. I don't think that's the way people see it.
I hope you understand that the engagement that you've had on this file has communities across Atlantic Canada concerned about the broader impact throughout our region.
What would you say other communities, like St. Martins and Alma, are to take away from the handling of this issue in your own backyard?
I would say that because I come from a small rural coastal community myself that, as the Minister for Fisheries and Oceans, I will never do anything that's going to undermine the conservation of our industry or of making sure that we have a long-term, sustainable fishery.
This is critical to us as Atlantic Canadians. It's also critical to us as all Canadians to make sure that first nations who have a treaty-affirmed right to fish for a moderate livelihood are able to implement that right. That is something the Supreme Court of Canada ruled on in 1999. I will always stand and say that conservation is the number one priority and objective. I have heard that from commercial harvesters and I've also heard that from first nations.
We all want the same thing. We need to figure out how we get there. In the conversations that I continue to have with commercial harvesters, with industry representatives and with first nations, they have all said that that is their overall objective.
I am not going to do anything at any point that is going to undermine that conservation objective. The commercial industry is extremely important to us in Atlantic Canada. We want to make sure that it is sustainable for the long term. Those are all things that I am working towards every day.
We all agree on conservation, but I would hope that we around the table also agree that community members throughout Atlantic Canada deserve to know what the rules are and that they'll be applied. There's been a complete vacuum on this issue. Our communities are calling out for leadership on it.
Minister, you said the RCMP has a job to do. I would say that you, Minister, and your department have a job to do. That is to regulate the fisheries throughout Atlantic Canada. What I've heard so far has not been encouraging.
Mr. Morrissey mentioned that you'd been minister for a year, but your government has been in government for the last five years. This episode has been allowed to fester over the last little while. We've watched it unfold. It's extremely important for the future, not just for the conservation that I think we can all agree on, but also for the sustainability of our communities and our fisheries.
I think the fishermen in my riding would like to hear a stronger statement from you, Minister, that their livelihood and their ability to earn a living is going to be protected as we move forward.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. I have to say that you run a tight ship when it comes to the clock. Well done.
I have a special welcome and thank you, Minister Jordan, for being with us today, and to your officials, Deputy Minister Sargent, Madam Lapointe, Mr. Wentzell and Mr. Lamirande. We really appreciate all of you being here to provide your insights and your thoughtful comments on a file that is really complex.
Minister Jordan, I know that you've been working tirelessly over the past year, and we appreciate your openness and, really, all of your hard work on what we know has been really challenging at times. I am from the Moncton area, and I'm not in a fishing community per se, but I have to say that this file certainly has captured the attention of many Canadians and everyone is really watching this. We really want it to come to a resolution, so again, thank you for being with us today.
I have two specific questions for you. First, I'm wondering if you would be able to speak to us and elaborate on the federal special representative who was recently appointed, Monsieur Surette. Could you elaborate on his role and his responsibilities?
:
Absolutely. Thank you for that question.
Mr. Surette was a joint appointment by me and Minister from Crown-Indigenous Relations. One of the things we heard from commercial harvesters a great deal was that they wanted to be at the table. We of course are negotiating nation to nation with the first nations communities. We wanted to make sure, though, that they felt their voice was heard. The appointment of the special representative is there to actually foster dialogue between the first nations communities and the commercial harvesters to make sure that everyone's voice is heard, to make sure that we are absolutely engaged with the commercial harvesters.
Mr. Surette is a well-respected member of his community. He has experience in working with the fisheries in the past in terms of difficult situations in fisheries, particularly in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. He brings a wealth of knowledge to this table. The other thing that he is going to be able to do is that he will be coming back to and me with an interim report in December, as well as a final report in March, with possible ways forward to help us bridge these gaps.
Commercial harvesters and first nations have fished together for generations. The divisions that have happened over this issue are difficult, and we need to make sure that we are doing everything we can to bridge those gaps and make sure that we can have our communities meld back together again.
There are a couple of points that I could maybe share with the committee, Chair.
As the minister mentioned earlier, lobster stocks across the Maritimes region are in the healthy zone. We determine that through a range of science, ranging from catch data from industry in addition to fishery independent data that we collect.
In terms of fishing in St. Peters Bay, again, as the minister referenced earlier, we are aware that there are a number of traps that are present in the bay. We are working very closely with our first nations partners to collaboratively work towards managing any risk to conservation in that particular geography, and we'll continue to do that.
I'm glad to hear you're taking it very seriously, but it would seem by the input that we've been receiving that they feel like many times, whatever input they have had has not been heard, received, implemented or factored in.
In fact, with what has been circulating and what is out in the public right now, many questions are arising. Is your government currently actively pursuing the establishment of a separate fishing authority? Is your government open to having two separate and distinct fishing authorities?
I think that's a fair question that a lot of Canadians have right now. I want to come back to that. Are you open to establishing a separate fishing authority?
Since 1999, the Unama'ki Institute of Natural Resources, UINR, has been working together and collaboratively with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and various protection agencies on a wide swath of different species, such as eels, oysters, salmon. We had Shelley Denny, who is doing her Ph.D. in marine biology, testify at this committee that they've been working collaboratively with government on a number of species.
Are they not a promising example of how government can collaboratively work with indigenous nations on resource management? They've been doing it for more than 20 years. Is Unama'ki not a model that has been working in Cape Breton, and is this something we could expand to all of the fishery?
I find it odd. I've heard the Conservative members opposite talk to you about have they read the Marshall decisions. As a former professor of Mi'kmaq studies, I'm wondering sometimes what Marshall case they're alluding to. Both Marshall I and Marshall II said that Donald Marshall Jr., someone who grew up 30 minutes away from me, someone I knew in my life and thanked for his efforts.... Not once but twice he went in front of the Supreme Court. He fished for eels, sold those eels out of season both times, and both times the Supreme Court ruled that his treaties were protected by section 35 of the Constitution and also by section 52 of the Constitution, which says that the Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada and that any law that is inconsistent with that provision of the Constitution is to the extent of the inconsistency of no force and effect.
I'm wondering how much that weighs into Canada's judgment when we're dealing with Mi'kmaq rights that have been upheld twice in the Supreme Court of Canada and that are recognized by the Constitution, the supreme law of this Canada. How much weight do we give to that when we're actually considering putting any kind of regulations in place that would be of no force and effect legally?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to start off by saying I was listening to Mr. Johns a couple of times. It seems that he's continually mixing up what district 34 is versus what St. Marys Bay is. I wish that he would reach out to people in my riding and understand the situation that they find themselves in. He continues to try to draw the issue of an illegal commercial summer fishery that has been going on in St. Marys Bay for close to 25 years, according to the previous , who can look out his front window and watch what's going on there. This has been the challenge for the people of Clare for a number of years. They are very concerned about it. They are very concerned about what's happening in their bay, which they look at every day.
Mr. Johns, I do hope at some point that you do reach out to folks like that. I offered you my phone number on a number of occasions so that you could understand the situation here in southwest Nova Scotia.
I want to talk a little bit about Bear River and Acadia, because Bear River and Acadia have written two letters at this point. Bear River is sort of to the Annapolis side of things and Acadia is the band to the southwest corner of it. They talked about the territorial area of their bands and how St. Marys Bay fits in their traditional area.
Has the minister considered the letters from Chief Potter and Chief Robinson?
To pick up on Mr. d'Entremont's question, I think given the current environment, we continue to be concerned, as the minister has said on many occasions, for the safety of all harvesters. We take any and all threats to orderly fisheries very, very seriously. We work very closely with our RCMP colleagues and other enforcement partners on the ground to share intelligence and make sure that everybody informs the risk assessment appropriately. We're also working very closely, in terms of the mandate of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, with individual harbour authorities to ensure that they are assessing the safety and security of harvesters at local ports.
We are working, of course, with all commercial harvesters, both first nations and non-first nations, to help ensure that they can prosecute the fisheries appropriately. We're going to continue to do that. Again, it's going to be through open dialogue that we move this forward, not through violent or disruptive acts.
Thank you.
Minister, I was pleased to hear you make several comments in response to earlier questions. Paraphrasing you a bit, you stated you'd never do anything to harm the overall fishery. You assured that harvesters are not left out. You heard their concerns. You don't want them to be left out in the process.
Some are trying to paint you, Minister, and your ministry as not hearing the concerns from the commercial industry, and that the government's only focused in one direction. Could you comment on your role as the minister and what steps you are taking to ensure that the interests of this very valuable commercial fishery are protected in maritime Canada in particular, in Atlantic Canada? I believe you may have alluded to it earlier, but I want you to have the opportunity to be clear and on the record so that there's no misunderstanding of your position that you have to adjudicate and protect both sides in this discussion.
:
Your time is up, Gord. I'm sorry about that. Two and a half minutes aren't long once you start the clock. We'll close off here.
I want to say a special thank you to the minister and her staff this evening for accommodating us for the full two hours, even though we were late starting. We really do appreciate your time here at the committee. I want to say a big thank you to all committee members this evening for the congenial way they acted, for the most part. You treated the minister with the utmost respect—I do appreciate that, as chair—and treated all other members with respect. I will close off with that.
I want to say a big thank you to staff, to the clerk, to the analysts, and of course to the wonderful interpreters we use every evening when we have our committee meetings.
I wish everybody on the committee a good evening. Enjoy what's left of your evening. Here in Newfoundland, it's later than anywhere else, so there's not much of the evening left. It's nightfall, and I'm not going to be up much longer.
Again, thanks for everything today. I look forward to seeing everybody again soon.
The committee now stands adjourned.