Good morning. My name is Daniel Landry and I'm a fisheries advisor with the Association des pêcheurs professionnels membres d'équipages. My members are currently on the job. So I'm going to represent them.
The Association des pêcheurs professionnels membres d'équipages is an association of midshore shrimp fishermen, small pelagic purse seiners, ground fishermen and, mostly, crab fishermen. Most of our members have extensive fishing experience, that is to say 20 or 30 years, and excellent training acquired at the New Brunswick School of Fisheries. Over the years, our members' incomes have melted like snow in the sun, from $35,000 to $12,000 a year, as a result of new costs and cuts by DFO to the captains' historic fishing levels. Every time DFO cuts our share of the fishery, our income follows that curve. In other words, all the department's fisheries management decisions have a direct impact on the crew.
It's been said that the fish resource belongs to all Canadians, and we agree. However, we would like someone to remind the department that we on the decks of the boats are also Canadians, that we also have a right to a decent wage to support our families and one day to hope to send our children to university. Unfortunately, the revenues we were sharing are no longer there as a result of fisheries management that has been politicized to death by Fisheries and Oceans Canada. I say “to death” because that management is killing our traditional industry and the entire community of interests that depends on it, that is to say crew members, plant workers, processors and all related employees. DFO's dogged attitude toward the traditional crab fishing fleet in area 12 suggests the worst economic scenarios. It's scaring away the skilled labourer on the boats and ruining all our efforts to develop the next generation, both on board the boats and on the decks of the ships.
In the past 40 years, we have worked with our federation to implement social benefits for our members. We've gotten to the point where we can no longer use them. Our members are finding it difficult to pay their $300 premium. They're looking for small insurance policies to replace their group insurance plan. They can't foresee the day when they'll be able to take part in the group RRSP program that we've created.
We are not opposed to the idea of sharing the resource with distressed fleets, but only when our own viability is not jeopardized. Our fleet is currently in distress, but we have to continue sharing the quota with organizations that are leasing quota at 35¢ a pound to their fishermen, who don't really have the knowledge or equipment necessary to fish across area 12 as a whole and, what is more, are not accountable for the resource because they probably won't be in that fishing area next year and don't have a permanent licence.
Is it normal to wind up in these conditions, with 130 traditional fishermen and 300 casuals? Well, that's the scenario in 2009, with the results we've seen and that we know in 2010. While Transport Canada is renewing the Marine Act and increasing the qualification criteria for seafarers, it will become impossible to do the 12 months at sea in 5 years necessary to be eligible for Transport Canada's fishing master, fourth class examinations. In addition, if our crab captains are still allowed to fish only crab and that fishery continues to be shared without regard to its profitability, it will become impossible to recruit new fishermen interested in getting training and trying to meet Transport Canada's requirements.
We hope that a serious investigation is conducted into the snow crab management in area 12, that a management method that is honest and fair toward our fleet is implemented, that peace returns to our communities in management meetings with DFO and, especially, that our relationship of trust is restored with Fisheries and Oceans' science sector.
It is not normal for Canadian fishermen to have to go to court to make themselves heard. This is becoming too frequent, much too frequent, with Fisheries and Oceans Canada.
Thank you for listening to me.