Good morning. Thank you, Chair and committee, for inviting me to testify at this meeting. It's my pleasure to appear today representing the RAD Network—which stands for restore, assert, defend—a national indigenous-led network supporting indigenous leadership and engagement in nature-based climate solutions.
I will start my testimony with a brief background on myself and the RAD Network's activities. I will then present four specific recommendations to the committee relating to fish habitat management, with offsetting, banking, and indigenous-led ecosystem restoration and stewardship as priority themes.
I grew up on the west coast of the country before moving to the Ottawa River watershed three years ago. I've worked in habitat restoration and stewardship in Canada and East Africa for the past 25 years, and I'm currently a technical, strategy and finance adviser to the RAD Network.
I am a former resident of Halfmoon Bay, in the chair's riding. If the chair or any of the committee members are familiar with Vital Kelp, a company based on the Sunshine Coast, the re-establishment of bull kelp habitat in Halfmoon Bay, Agamemnon Channel, and with the Tla'amin Nation is an excellent example of work that creates fish habitat through indigenous-led ecosystem restoration.
I would be remiss if I did not report to the committee that a sport-fishing boat I still co-own in Halfmoon Bay, the Blind Squirrel, does occasionally find a chinook by Epsom Point around sunset. This can anecdotally be attributed to good habitat stewardship at the local level.
In the present era of major project ambition, tightening of monitoring and regulatory budgets, and the inevitable impact on fish habitat, there is a need to identify opportunities for creating better fish habitat outcomes, regulatory efficiency, and certainty for indigenous rights-holders that their inherent and treaty rights will be recognized and upheld.
The RAD Network has worked with a group of NGOs and policy experts to co-create a series of high-level recommendations to the committee that were first presented by Stewart Elgie on November 18. The recommendations generated by the group will require a change in policy and or legislation to implement. I will review the four recommendations and highlight how indigenous-led habitat restoration, stewardship and banking are effective ways to achieve net gain habitat outcomes. Indigenous management of fees collected in lieu is also an effective option to evolve and expand the current policy and legislative frameworks connected to the Fisheries Act.
Recommendation one is return to net gain as the guiding habitat objective under the Fisheries Act.
Net gain could be operationalized in many ways and include a blend of restoration projects and intact habitat stewardship work. A net gain objective also mitigates critiques of underperformance of the DFO's present no-net-loss objective.
Recommendation two is to add third party habitat banking for better fishery and economic outcomes.
Third party habitat banking presents a critical opportunity for indigenous communities to lead restoration work in their traditional territories and act as a habitat bank delivering outcomes to multiple project proponents. This will support proponents' objectives, because there will be supply certainty for high-quality, permanent fish habitat outcomes that also meet the government's commitment to “building a renewed relationship with Indigenous Peoples that is based on the recognition of rights, respect, co-operation, and partnership.”
Recommendation three is to allow fees in lieu of offsets for better fishery and economic outcomes.
Fees-in-lieu is a system that allows proponents to pay for their offset needs versus investing in habitat projects and waiting for the results. There is an efficiency element that is likely attractive to both proponent and regulator. It also makes possible the aggregation of smaller offset payments to finance larger, more impactful fish habitat restoration projects. Deploying capital through a series of indigenous-led organizations would amplify the impact and legitimacy of this system.
Recommendation four is to address the cumulative loss from many small projects.
Cumulative losses of habitat from small projects that typically work to receive a letter of advice aggregate into habitat loss that is significant. This recommendation is premised on the robust adoption of recommendations one, two and three, which would give proponents of small projects a clear path to mitigate the loss of habitat.
In closing, I would like to urge the committee to include details of these recommendations in a final report and consider the larger opportunity provided by indigenous-led habitat banking, management of fees paid in lieu and net gain objectives. They all create conditions for better fish habitat outcomes, certainty, efficiency and permanence for project proponents, including provincial governments that are proponents of major infrastructure projects.
The recommendations also lower the cost of regulation and monitoring for the DFO.
Most importantly from the RAD Network perspective, these recommendations prioritize a rights holder-centred approach to restoration and stewardship of critical fish habitat across the country.
Thank you for the opportunity to present to the committee today. I look forward to questions and discussion.