Good evening.
In fact, we're going to split our time and make sure that we don't exceed the 10 minutes allotted to us.
Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for agreeing to hear the testimony of the 148 commercial lobster fishers from the Gaspé Peninsula represented this evening by the Regroupement des pêcheurs professionnels de homard du Sud de la Gaspésie.
I am O'neil Cloutier, general manager of the Regroupement. I am also the president of the Alliance des pêcheurs professionnels du Québec and the secretary of the Federation of Independent Fish Harvesters of Canada. Finally, I have also been a professional fisherman since 1983.
My colleague Claire Canet is a project manager at the Regroupement. She has a degree in French law and a university diploma in conflict resolution. She has practised as a lawyer and facilitator in New Zealand.
We will send you our detailed written statement within the next 24 hours.
The mission of the Regroupement is to ensure the sustainable development of the fishery by maintaining a balance between the economic needs of inshore fishers in the southern Gaspé Peninsula and the sustainability of the species on which they rely, particularly American lobster.
On December 13, 2019, a mandate was given to the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and Canadian Coast Guard to execute and accelerate reconciliation with first nations. In this context, the process followed by the department raises fundamental questions regarding the way in which fishing activities are managed, access to the resource for all, the sustainability of stocks and the economic balance of coastal communities that depend on the fishery.
The current violence is a symptom of a flawed negotiation process followed by the government and the constant exclusion of commercial fishers from fisheries management discussions. The government approach divides coastal communities that depend on fishing for a living. This is compounded by the repeated public use of violent terms such as “disgusting”, “racist” and “terrorist”. I should also mention that recent events were due to a minority of fishermen, and that the Coalition of Atlantic and Québec Fishing Organizations, of which the Regroupement is a member, does not tolerate violence.
Since October 30, 2019, the Regroupement has been calling on the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to put in place a process of discussion, dialogue and communication involving the first nations of the Gaspé Peninsula, the Regroupement and the department. To date, the department has still not responded to this call.
In addition, the Regroupement has still not received a response from the department regarding the measures that were under discussion. The Regroupement has also not been consulted by the department on these measures.
Any change in the measures of a conservation-based lobster fishing plan in favour of one group of fishers inevitably causes inequalities and tensions within the coastal communities that depend on the fishery.
Since the 17th century, non-indigenous coastal communities in the Gaspé Peninsula have depended on lobster for food and income.
The commercial fishing season lasts 10 weeks, from the end of April to the end of June, a period when lobsters are not moulting and when egg-bearing females are released as much as possible. It is during this period that commercial lobster fishers derive a portion of their annual income.
In 2013, the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans noted that, since 2008, the lobster fishing sector has been facing unprecedented economic and structural challenges. It felt that these efforts should not be relaxed, that the lobster sector must stay the course and continue to make the changes necessary to ensure its stability and sustainability.
Since 2006, the Regroupement des pêcheurs professionnels de homard du Sud de la Gaspésie has implemented multiple measures to reduce fishing effort by 30% in order to rebuild lobster stocks. It plays a central role in the conservation and sustainability of the stocks, in order to allow all lobster fishers, whether from first nations or non-indigenous communities, to continue to carry out their fishing activities, on which all depend, in an equitable and sustainable manner.
In 2019, the commercial lobster fishery in Gaspésie in areas 19, 20 and 21 represented close to $45 million, or 24% of the total landed value recorded in Gaspésie. According to public statements from Listuguj, the Mi'kmaq first nations in the Gaspé Peninsula earned more than $40 million in commercial fishing income that same year.
The Department of Fisheries and Oceans issued a total of 163 lobster fishing licences in 2020 for areas 19, 20 and 21: 148 to non-indigenous persons, 12 to the three Mi'kmaq first nations of the Gaspé Peninsula and three to the Maliseet first nation of Viger.
This is the equivalent, in 2020, of one lobster fishing licence for every 610 non-aboriginal residents in the Gaspé Peninsula and one lobster fishing licence for every 223 first nations residents in the Gaspé Peninsula.