Thank you, Chair.
My question will focus on this point as a follow-up to my colleague from Newfoundland on squaring the circle. No disrespect, but when officials from DFO come in and appear before this committee, we get a view and we get testimony that “we're consulting extensively and we're working entirely with the industry for their best interests”.
When I meet fishers on the harbours and the wharfs, and when we heard from fishers before this committee, they did not see it that way. They do not view the department as consulting with them. Their view is that the department talks to them, but does not consult with them. They do not get input back. I'll use a couple of points to illustrate that.
In Prince Edward Island, the boat size is restricted to 45 feet, I believe, within the lobster fishery. The lobster fishery is totally managed by capacity. If the fishers were fishing at about 48 feet it should have no impact, if they want a safer vessel. At the same time, the department and the industry are advocating for more quality. The use of a fishing vessel has changed dramatically over the last number of years as quality has been driven by the marketplace back to the fishers. They're putting more equipment on board the vessel to hold the fish they catch, so they need a larger vessel.
I'll get to this point. In the tuna fishery in my riding, each tuna fisher is issued a tag to catch one fish. That fish has to be monitored; it's a monitored fishery. If you don't hail DFO monitors when you come in, they will seize your fish and the Receiver General will get the money for it. If a fisher decides that they want to go and fish on a Saturday, they have to get permission to fish in another boat or they cannot do it. On Saturdays, there are not many offices open within DFO. This is the complaint I get.
They ask what you are really managing. You've already determined what they can fish. They have to check it in. Why does DFO have to approve their request to fish from another vessel? If they want to go out in a canoe, they say, they should be able to do it, because it has nothing to do with regulating the fishery. It's those types of policies.... It's the same thing.
The evidence we heard on the buddy system was to the contrary. In fact, the testimony that was given was that fishers want to do more of the buddy system, but they're frustrated by DFO, which will not allow it. As well, there's the case of a fisher who had to use four separate boats because he could not fish his allocation on different ones.... He was forced to use that.
I fail to see the logic of some of the regulations within DFO when it comes to some of these fisheries that are managed in numerous methodologies other than the size of the vessels. Could you speak briefly to that? The industry is very frustrated, and they do not have the view that DFO consults with them. I'm using that in a broad sense.