Good afternoon, honourable members of Parliament and Chairperson.
My name is Duncan Cameron. I am a fourth-generation fisherman and I sit before you today as a representative of the B.C. Crab Fishermen's Association. Our board is made up of elected representatives from the different management areas on our coast. Our areas are lettered similar to how lobster districts are numbered on the east coast. However, every three years, we can select different areas. All our directors are active crab harvesters.
The Dungeness crab fishery is B.C.'s most valuable fishery and has some of the most advanced monitoring tools in the world. The crab fishery was the first in North America to introduce video monitoring in conjunction with RFID-scanned traps, a GPS speed algorithm and robust conditions for the licence to meet conservation objectives.
Unfortunately, we now find ourselves confronted with a pressing issue that threatens the very foundation of our industry. The ability of processors, foreign interests and large corporations to acquire fishing licences directly undermines the conservation of our species, reconciliation efforts and the landed value of our catch. Since 2018, we have been advocating that DFO restrict licence ownership solely to first nations fishery initiatives and individual fishermen, but unfortunately, our pleas have gone unanswered.
Our request for this crucial policy change was and is driven by ongoing reconciliation processes and court directives aimed at granting first nations access to the fishery. The Reconciliation Framework Agreement signed between coastal first nations and the Government of Canada, as well as the Ahousaht case affirming rights to fish, have indicated the use of the willing buyer, willing seller mechanism.
As Ahousaht First Nation realized their crab rights through their appeal decision, the Canadian government was ordered to buy back the equivalent access awarded to Ahousaht from active harvesters. However, because processors were able to compete in buying licences, only a few licences were brought back, and instead, many of the licences were repurchased by processors. The department did nothing to make licences available and failed to take action, leaving us to bear the consequences.
As a result of this inaction, we have witnessed adverse impacts on multiple fronts. Access has been reallocated without proper mitigation for existing harvesters, leading to tensions between indigenous and non-indigenous harvesters. Illegal sales fisheries have thrived, particularly during biologically sensitive crab seasons, and access for first nations outside of Ahousaht territory has been diluted as harvesters have moved to other areas upon three-year reselection.
It is crucial to recognize that processors can secure seafood through alternative means, such as developing new markets, offering competitive services and pricing or partnering with first nations for access. All these avenues lead to positive outcomes for the fishery and coastal communities. The processing facilities required for the crab fishery are much simpler and cost less than those for finfish and other species. That is why we have so many more processing facilities for crab than there are for other species.
Similarly, investors can invest in the seafood industry by investing in infrastructure or other sectors of the marine industry in search of a return on investment from our ocean economy. However, fishermen depend on fishing licences to access and exercise their livelihoods.
A fallacy that has been communicated from the Pacific region by DFO and others is that different conservation objectives in B.C. have shaped licensing policy. This could not be further from the truth. Ownership of fishing licences in a majority of fisheries has nothing to do with conservation, and it is not a tool to manage the conservation effort. We manage conservation through spatial closures, haul restrictions, trap limits, trap size, bait restrictions, crab size, biological sampling and many other tools. We do not use licence ownership or transferability to achieve conservation objectives.
Another common argument presented against this change is that access concerns, such as marine protected areas, are much more concerning to harvesters than licence ownership. While MPAs may be a serious concern and are certainly one we share, two things can be true at once: We need to have access to fishing grounds and we need to see the benefits of the fishery.
A more disingenuous part of this argument is ignoring the fact that licence ownership is directly linked to access decisions. In the MPA example, we can see that where first nations own access and the surrounding communities benefit from the fishery, the proposed protected areas have significantly fewer areas proposed to be closed to our crab fishery. The simple logic is that when a community member sees benefits from sustainable fisheries, they are not as likely to restrict us.
In closing, we recommend the following:
One, immediately restrict the sale of licences to fishermen and first nations. Two, commit more capacity in the Pacific region to this issue to realize the socio-economic benefits of the fisheries, specifically human capacity. Three, increase regulatory oversight for commercial fishing boat and licence brokerages, as outside of the commercial crab fishery, there is essentially only one brokerage.
Thank you for your time.