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Politics

In a reversal, ethics commissioner to investigate LeBlanc for lucrative Arctic surf clams deal

Ethics commissioner Mario Dion has launched an investigation of Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc's decision to award a lucrative licence for the Arctic surf clam fishery to a group that has both familial and federal Liberal ties, reversing a decision he made earlier this month to pass on such a probe, CBC News has learned.

Tories allege deal benefits brother of sitting Liberal MP, a former Liberal MP and cousin of minister's wife

A brewing controversy alleging cronyism and conflict of interest involving a clam fishing licence awarded by Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc may not be grabbing national attention but it should be, says a Conservative MP. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Federal ethics commissioner Mario Dion has launched an investigationof Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc's decision to award a lucrative licence for the Arctic surf clam fishery to a group that has ties to his wife's family and the federal Liberal party areversal of a decision the commissioner made earlier this month to pass on such a probe, CBC News has learned.

Conservative B.C. MP Todd Doherty, the fisheries critic, allegesthe government's effort to expand ownership in the fishery by clawing back part of an existing quotaheld by Clearwater Foods andhanding it to agroup with Indigenous representation violates the Conflict of Interest Act because it enriches the brother of a sitting Liberal MP,a former Liberal MP, and a cousin of LeBlanc's wife. Doherty asked Dion to initiate this examination.

A spokesperson for Dion would not confirm or deny that an examination is now underway, as is the commissioner's protocol to ensure such an investigation is conducted in confidence.

Comment differs

"We cannot comment at this time on whether or not Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion has launched an examination under theConflict of Interest Actin relation to the conduct of the Honourable Dominic LeBlanc," a spokesperson said in a statement.

But this comment differs from the last timeCBCNews asked the commissioner about an inquiry into LeBlanc's rolein the surf clams bid. At the time, the spokesperson confirmed an investigation was "not being contemplated."

It was not then known publicly that a member of the minister's wife's family had been part of the bid.

"Our government is always happy to work with the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner," a spokesperson for LeBlanc said Friday. "Our decision to introduce Indigenous participation is consistent with our government's commitment to developing a renewed relationship between Canada and Indigenous peoples."

Dion had rejected the initial request forexamination,telling Doherty at the time thathe had been imprecise in his wording for a request, citing the conflict of interest code rather than the Conflict ofInterestAct, which includes provisions relating to ministerial conduct. He also said he found no "reasonable grounds to believe that MinisterLeBlancwould have contravened ... the Act."

Arctic surf clam is displayed at an event on Dec. 1, 2017, celebrating its new offshore fishing vessel, the Anne Risley. (Robert Short/CBC)

The winning bid for the Arctic surf clamlicence was claimed by Five Nations Clam Corporation and its partner, Premium Seafoods. The latter company is controlled by Edgar Samson, thebrother of Nova Scotia Liberal MP Darrell Samson.One of the Indigenous partners in the company,NunatuKavut, is presided over by former Liberal MP Todd Russell. A spokesperson for LeBlancconfirmedGillesThriault, the minister's wife's cousin, also has ties toFive Nations.

The surf clam licence is worth tens of millions of dollars.The group will now have a quota for8,924tonnesof the seafood delicacy, which is harvested in the waters off Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador and is often shipped to Asiafor sushi.

'Great friend'

A Conservative order paper question, a tool used by the opposition to extract answers from tight-lipped departments, asked whetherLeBlancknew Samson was the brother of a sitting MP prior to awarding the surf clam licence to his company; it also asked when the minister became aware of his ownership stake.Aterseresponse from the department reads, "Yes, and unknown."

Chief Aaron Sock, the president of Five Nations Clam, said in a statement to CBC News thatThriaultis "well known to anyone who knows the fisheries business in Atlantic Canada" and is a "great friend to the community."

"Any suggestion that our community, or any Indigenous community for that matter, is incapable of making a case for access to the Surf Clam fishery based solely on the merits of their proposal, is offensive and patronizing, but not surprising."

LeBlanc, too, has said Conservative claims that the company was awarded the bid because of these connections is "ludicrous."

"I made my decision for no other reason than to allow for increased Indigenous participation in the fishery. I reject any insinuation to the contrary in the strongest of terms," LeBlanc said in a statement.

Middle-class jobs

In September 2017, the government announced it would be expanding access to the fishery currently a monopoly controlled by Clearwater through a fourth licence. It indicatedthewinning bid would go toan "Indigenous entity"as part of an initiative to create middle-class jobsfor First Nations people in all four Atlantic Canadian provinces and Quebec.

We are talking about a group of Liberal family members who had no boat and were not even incorporated until after the announcement was made.- Conservative MP Todd Doherty

But Doherty alleges that when the licence was awarded in February 2018, the Indigenous-led Five Nations Clam Company didn't even exist and was simply an entity on paper. Doherty also said the bid did not have an "aggregate of multiple Indigenous communities associated with the bid," as was deemed "essential" by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans in its assessment criteria for winning bids.

AsCBCNova Scotia first reported,court records filed last month by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) revealthat the winning applicant is only 25 per cent Indigenous-owned, with the remainder inthe hands of Premium Seafoods.

"Here are the facts. We are talking about a group of Liberal family members who had no boat and were not even incorporated until after the announcement was made," Doherty said in question period recently.

"They did not have any First Nation partners. As a matter of fact, their bid had multiple placeholders. They still secured a lucrative government quota worth hundreds of millions of dollars without meeting critical bid criteria."

In addition to the ethics probe,LeBlanc'sdecision is now being challenged in Federal Court by one of the losing Indigenous bidders for the licence,Miawpukek Mi'kamawey Mawi'omi First Nation.

The price of Halifax-based Clearwater Foods stock has cratered since the government announced it would end Arctic surf clam monopoly, dropping some 60 per cent.