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Nova Scotia

An appeal for calm as tensions rise again over N.S. Mi'kmaw lobster fishery

Fisheries and Oceans says its monitoring and enforcement activities this summer in southwestern Nova Scotia are likely at their highest levels since the dispute surfaced four years ago.

DFO moving fishery officers into area from across Nova Scotia and Canada

Sipekne'katik First Nation fishing boats are seen from the wharf in Saulnierville, N.S., on Oct. 20, 2020. DFO says it's moving federal fishery officers from across the province and Canada into southwestern Nova Scotia to keep the situation under control. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

Federal fishery officers from across Canada are being moved to southwestern Nova Scotia as tensions rise again over a Mi'kmaw lobster fishery underway in St. Marys Bay.

Thetop enforcement officer at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans blames misinformation for aggravating the situation, asking both Mi'kmaw and commercial fishermen and their supporters to step back.

"What I want to say to people is to give the fishery officers space to do their jobs. They are doing their jobs. They're doing it well and professionally and objectively," saidHeather McCready, DFO's director general of conservation and protection.

Problems on both sides

The tensions are over the sale of lobster caught under communal food, social and ceremonial licences (FSC). Thatfishery has noseason and is regulated by DFO, but licence conditions do not permit the sale of the catch.

"We are aware that there are some sales of FSC fish, which is, of course, not allowed under those licences," McCreadysaid.

"It is a problem that we're aware of and we are monitoring it. There are also non-compliance issues in the non-Indigenous commercial sector," she said, referring to unlicensed fishing or unreported sales.

Last week,RCMP were called to investigate after several boats belonging to the Sipekne'katik First Nation were cut loose from a wharf in the area.

Growing tensions

Commercial harvesters have repeatedly complained Sipekne'katik's FSC fishery is being used as a cloak for a commercial fishery.

Tensions that have been building since 2017 came to a head last fall when protests bysome non-Indigenous commercial fishermen and their supporters turned violentafterSipekne'katiklaunched a moderate livelihood lobster fishery in St. Marys Bay.

The band was exercising a treaty right to sell its catch that was recognized by the courts two decades ago. While the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed the right to sell, it also ruled governments have the right to regulate the treatyfishery for conservation and in the public interest.

Most resources in 4years

McCready said the FSC fishery in St.Marys Bay has grown larger this summerandDFO has responded with "more resources there than we have in probably four years."

Some enforcement is overt, such as fishery officers on wharves or on the water. Some are undercover.

Heather McCready, director general of conservation and protection at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, is asking both commercial and Indigenous fishermen to give fishery officers space to do their jobs. (CBC)

"We have taken some resources out of the rest of Nova Scotia, moved them into that area, because those are the areas that need more visible enforcement.... So we do want people to see that the officers are out there and consider that when they're considering their actions," McCready said.

"We are bringing in people from other parts of the country just to supplement the force there and also give people a day off occasionally because there are people working on this that haven't had a day off in a real long time."

McCreadysaid she is worried the dispute is becoming even more polarizing because of misinformation. One recent claim, she said, is that DFO officers "colluded" with commercial fishermen and cut lines on Mi'kmaw-owned vessels.

"That's obviously completely untrue," she said, adding that on the commercial side, DFO has been accused of not doing enough.

Sipekne'katik Chief Mike Sack says DFO does not have a right to impose rules on the band's food, social and ceremonial fishery. (Nic Meloney/CBC)

On Tuesday,Sipekne'katik Chief Mike Sack said DFO did not accept the band's FSC fishery plan this year, which allows the sale of 25 per cent of the catch to cover costs and increased trap limits of five per licence, up from four.

"Today I was on the phone to the [federal fisheries] ministerand she asked why we would do that. And I just said, like our community had the highest rates of poverty. It's a very simple answer," he said.

Sack said what DFO calls "normal enforcement" by pulling and checking traps in a licensed fishery feels more like fisheries officers are "just down there taunting our people, wanting them to react."

"We welcome them there," said Sack."We just don't agree with them trying to impose their rules on us when we have a right to regulate our own fishery."

Colin Sproul of the Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance says commercial fishermen are upset that DFO has not enforced the FSC fishery regulations enough this summer. (CBC)

Both sides of the dispute have saidthey want no repeat of lastyear'sevents.

Colin Sproul of the Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance, representing commercial fishermen, said the DFO response to the FSC fisheryunderway this summer in St. Marys Bay has been "woefully inadequate."

"By our accounts, we're seeing as many as 45 boatsfishing commercially outside of the commercial season right now between Yarmouth and Margaretsville, N.S.,along the shoreline," Sproul said.

"The response from DFO is a pittance compared to what needs to take place. I call on the minister to respect the conditions of the FSC licences and call for enforcement on them."

Warning against taking law into own hands

McCready moved from a similar position at Environment and Climate Change Canada to become director general of DFO's conservation and protection section last Decemberafter the blow-up in St. Marys Bay.

She issued a warning to some in the commercial industry who've said theywill do the job if she doesn't step up.

"Are you going to be intimidating and harassing a particular community? Are you talking about destroying their personal property? We did see examples of that last year. Are you talking about actually engaging in physical altercations with people? Those activities I just described are illegal," McCready said.

"Secondly, it's going to dramatically inflame tensions on this issue, probably get somebody hurt. It's also counterproductive."