Nova Scotia cracks down on lobster operators to protect industry's 'integrity' - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia cracks down on lobster operators to protect industry's 'integrity'

Nova Scotia is cracking down on two large lobster operators following separate court convictions efforts it says willprotect the integrity of the province's billion-dollar lobster business.

Suspensions issued at 2 southwestern lobster pounds

A lobster sits on a bench.
The Fisheries and Aquaculture minister has issued licence suspensions at two major lobster pounds in southwestern Nova Scotia. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

Nova Scotia is cracking down on two largelobster poundoperators following separate court convictions efforts it says willprotect the integrity of the province's billion-dollar lobster business.

In August 2018, Fisher Direct in Shag Harbour, N.S.,was caught with lobster harvested under an Indigenous licence, which bars sellingthe catch.

The pound which has annual salesupwards of $20 million had received a shipment of 1,400 kilogramsof lobsters the day before federal fisheries officers descended on the facility.

Inside the 31 crates, officers found 48 lobsters taggedfor Indigenous food, socialor ceremonial purposes that the department hadpreviously microchipped.

In March 2022, owner Tyler Nickerson not the company pleaded guilty to violating the federal Fisheries Act.

He was fined $15,000 and ordered to pay a further $5,000 into a federal environmental fund.

As a result of the conviction, provincial Fisheries and Aquaculture Minister Steve Craig amended Fisher Direct'slicences in late November, to bar Nickerson's involvement in the operation for two years.

Claims sanction is excessive

Nickerson appealed, arguing the punishment is excessivefor a single conviction from an incident that occurred more than four years ago.

Hislawyers said the suspension does not give enough weight to an unblemished track record before or after conviction, the significance of the court fine, the unreasonableness in timing andtwo-year penalty.

Nickerson's suspension was set to begin at the start of the winter lobster fishery in southwest Nova Scotia in late 2022.

In an affidavit, Nickerson said thebusiness employs 55 people and spends a million dollars annually on local goods and services.

"I am concerned that Fisher Direct handling things without me at the helm will be chaotic and potentially lead to the demise of the business," he said.

A wall of lobster traps along the side of a road.
A wall of lobster traps was set up outside the Fisheries and Oceans Canada office in Meteghan, N.S. (Genevieve Normand/Radio-Canada)

Nickerson's lawyers successfully argued for a temporary halt on the suspension.

On Dec. 2, Justice Pierre Muise stayed the ministerial order until May. No date has been set to hear the appeal.

Not tough enough

Colin Sproul,president of the Unified Fisheries Conservation Alliance, which represents commercial fishermen in Nova Scotia, said he is "incredibly disappointed" with the suspension imposed on Nickerson.

"Nova Scotia fishermen have been left with little recourse to protect the sustainability of our fishery other than actions that can be taken here by the province to stop people who perpetuate this illegal fishery," Sproulsaid.

Sproul wanted the licence revoked, citing the case of alobster pound outside of Digby, N.S.,that was convictedin 2020 of illegally selling lobsterharvested under a federal food, social and ceremonial licence.

"It's clearly bad for the fishery, bad for Indigenous people, bad for sustainability and bad for Nova Scotia," he said.

Atlantic ChiCanalso facingsuspension

Meanwhile, a larger operation in southwestern Nova Scotia is also facing at least one licence suspension.

In 2021, Atlantic ChiCan on Cape Sable Island was convicted for illegally shipping Americanlobsters to China, claiming they came from Canada.

In August 2022, the company was issued a two-week suspension on buying lobsterstartingMarch 1, 2023.

Atlantic ChiCan was subsequently convicted in October 2022for holding undersized and egg-bearing lobsters at its plant in January 2019.

The company has overhauled its operation since then and fired managers in charge at the time.

John Crandall Nickerson, the chief operations manager of Atlantic ChiCan,saidit now facesan additional 21-day suspension in December 2023, which it hopes toreduce before a departmental hearing.

"We are trying to get through the past and put it behind us," Crandall Nickersonsaid.

Bruce Nunn, spokesperson for the Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture,said it'sstill reviewing Atlantic ChiCan's convictions from October 2022.

The province said it would not comment onNickerson's appeal because it is before the courts.

"We have laws and regulations in this province for a reason, including ones that protect the integrity of the Nova Scotia seafood-value chain, and we will take action against licence holders who jeopardise that value chain," Nunn said in a statement.

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