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Environment committee  That's an interesting question in many respects. Many people feel that the sole purpose of COSEWIC is simply to provide advice to the federal government for the purposes of including species on the national legal list, for which there might then be recovery strategies required if

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  This is slightly out of the purview of COSEWIC, but my understanding is that part of the process for determining whether a species is included on the legal list is an assessment of the potential impact of that decision from a positive and a negative perspective.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  In essence, yes. It's basically to give our assessment of the current status of the species in question. The assessment is meant to reflect its likelihood of extinction in the relatively near future and also to identify threats to its persistence.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  Oh, in fact the report did.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  It also included information that was available to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and all the relevant information in terms of population projections and projections of habitat loss for the polar bear. All that information was in there.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  That's for marine fishes. There hasn't been an endangered or threatened marine fish accepted. The first marine fishes of special concern were accepted by the government earlier this year. There have been freshwater fishes that have been included on schedule 1.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  There were two species, two groups of sockeye salmon. One was in Sakinaw Lake and the other was in Cultus Lake.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  Yes, they were recommended to be listed as endangered.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  No, they weren't.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  Based on the responses that were posted in the Canada Gazette, it appears they were not listed because of the perceived economic consequences of reducing catches in a mixed-stock fishery off the coast of British Columbia.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  As chair of an advisory body, I think we are there to provide advice. That's our role, from a legislative perspective: to provide advice. I'm sure ministers receive advice from all sorts of different groups and individuals. Our responsibility is simply to ensure that the advice v

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  It's true that one of the options under the act is to reject COSEWIC's advice.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  That's correct.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings

Environment committee  I've been the chair since 2006, and I've been a member of COSEWIC since 2000.

May 28th, 2009Committee meeting

Prof. Jeffrey Hutchings