Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
It's nice to see you all again after your trip to the east coast a short while ago. The weather has improved slightly. Let's hope it improves some more.
I really reiterate what my colleagues said here earlier. There is a very deep crisis in the Atlantic lobster industry, not only in Prince Edward Island but through all the five eastern provinces. I've given you information in the past at a previous meeting, but I'll just perhaps give you a reminder of the situation in Prince Edward Island.
P.E.I. has 1,300 lobster harvesters. The lobster fishery is their primary source of income. While there are other species, they're minimal, and everyone in Prince Edward Island is fully dependent on lobster as their primary income source. We're divided into three lobster fishing areas, two in the spring and one in the fall.
At the present moment this year, prices are $2.75 a pound live for canners—that's the 71 millimetre to 81 millimetre size—and $3.50 a pound for markets, which is over 81 millimetres. These are the lowest prices in the region, and we wonder why. We look across the strait at parts of Nova Scotia where they fish essentially the same waters, the lobster are the same size, they have similar resource management schemes, and the prices there are $3.50 and $4.00. So we have some very strong concerns about what is actually going on through the marketplace, particularly at the level of brokers and wholesalers, but we don't have the answer at this point.
Nonetheless, these prices fishermen are receiving are far, far below their basic cost of production, and they are in crisis mode right now. We've seen in Prince Edward Island already fishermen being put on daily boat quotas by processors. We've seen some buyers refuse to buy on particular days. This is the first time in the history of the P.E.I. lobster industry that this has ever happened.
As I mentioned, there are two spring zones in Prince Edward Island. Landings on the north shore of P.E.I. in LFA 24, as it's known, are reasonable. However, with the low price it's very, very difficult for people to earn a profit. In LFA 26A, which happens to be Mr. MacAulay's riding, landings are low and prices are low. People are dismissing long-time crew members; members who have worked with their captains for 15 and 18 years are losing their jobs. Working wives are taking leaves of absence from their traditional work to work on the backs of the boats with their husbands just to try to make ends meet. It's a very sad situation. This is on top of what happened last year, when there was a full 25% reduction in the shore price of the raw product. So now we're seeing, in two years, more than a 50% reduction in the price to fishermen. They simply can't afford it.
Again, in conjunction with my colleagues here, we fully agree that there has to be both a short-term and a long-term approach to this issue. We would argue there has to be some sort of price stabilization support from both federal and provincial contributions, so people can in fact make some sort of a living out of this industry for this year.
The adjustment of the fishers' EI program is vital to the welfare of all fishing families over the course of this coming winter. We have submitted a document to the government and to members of this committee in the last number of weeks arguing that EI should be based on 2008 levels. This would ensure that people in fact could at least feed their families and pay their household bills over the course of the winter. Without that, we're going to see a large number of bankruptcies and we're going to see people going on welfare. And I'm not exaggerating at all when I say this. It's very, very serious.
We suggest that an EI program, possibly with pilot projects as Earle had mentioned earlier, may have to continue into 2010 and 2011 if this recession does not ease.
In Prince Edward Island, of course, we're going after our provincial government for an expansion of their low-interest loan program to fishers. We're looking for a debt repayment holiday where necessary for fishers who are in the most serious trouble, and certainly special consideration for recent new entrants to the industry who bought in at relatively high prices, have very high payments to make, and are facing the brunt of this whole process.
We suggest that there has to be some level of credit support to the processing industry. We know that processors have not been able to access their usual lines of credit. The private lenders have been very reluctant to fund them, as in all manufacturing industries. That's affected somewhat the processors' ability to buy, and if they're not buying, fishermen aren't fishing, and of course money is not going through the system.
For the long term, obviously, we need immediate action to begin on a licence rationalization scheme. We agree that it has to be Atlantic-wide. As most of you may understand, in Prince Edward Island and certainly in New Brunswick, for a number of years now we've been looking for a licence rationalization scheme, particularly in the Northumberland Strait. We started this, I guess, around the year 2000. There was some slight buyback through crab money allocations in 2004 and 2005, but the situation so far has not improved, and we're hoping that the government and the minister will go forward with a licence rationalization scheme.
Down the road we feel that in terms of a total industry restructuring at other fleets, other fisheries, we have to put proper funding to an extensive international marketing and sales initiative to market Canadian fish products. It hasn't been done extensively to this point, but we hope we will move in that direction.
There also has to be a program of industry information and education to the rank-and-file fishermen. When we look at the east coast of Canada, we're looking at 10,000 fishing enterprises. They're spread out over a host of rural communities. Many of the fishers' organizations do not have the capacity in terms of funding or personnel to reach out to all of them, to advise them and inform them of all the issues are that are going on. We're urging both our provincial and federal governments to really get onside in terms of developing a proper program of information going to fish harvesters. In that case we see a good deal of effort has to be put towards the whole issue of equal labelling, the ocean-to-plate or fishing-for-the-market concept, and we're looking forward to some assistance in that regard.
I'll leave it there, Mr. Chairman, and allow you to ask your questions.
Thank you.