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Fisheries committee  It's because of the high sea lice infection rate this year, which is such a visible impact. DFO was not out on the water this year because of COVID, but my research team was. I preserved all the fish that I counted sea lice on, so if there's any question about what I recorded, th

August 11th, 2020Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  There are other factors. As I noted with the PRV science, honestly it has become so confusing within DFO. There are two DFO labs with completely opposite assessments. Just put that aside for a moment and look at the sea lice. The minister cannot look at what happened to the Fras

August 11th, 2020Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  Yes, I believe it is.

August 11th, 2020Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  I think, first and foremost, an aquaculture act has to move the industry onto land. Then they're free to grow. They won't have sea lice problems. They won't have low oxygen problems. They won't have the algal bloom problems. Norway is pushing very hard for the industry to go ont

August 11th, 2020Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  I'm speaking to you from 'Namgis territory, here on the Fraser sockeye migration route, and I want to start by saying that I'm grateful for the Government of Canada's response to COVID-19. There is no other country I would rather be in right now. For the moment, policy is keepi

August 11th, 2020Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  Yes. The minister's announcement, frankly, was quite confusing, because it sounded as though there would be a two-month interim testing period and that he would test only for two strains of piscine reovirus, which suggests that we have a local endemic British Columbia strain. How

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  I think it has to be in the order of millions, frankly. It has to be a deterrent that they would weigh against the profitability of each grow-out and decide whether or not they want to take the risk. The problem is that they cannot stop the herring from going into the pens, the

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  The chemical you're referring to is lufenuron, which has not been approved in Norway. In fact, the company withdrew its application to have it approved in Norway, so we are experimenting with it here. The fish are dangerous for human consumption for 350 days. That suggests that t

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  Yes, I think it's very important. I think the problem that I described is due to the divided loyalty. People within DFO don't know whether they're promoting the industry or regulating it. The industry, of course, is very forceful in how it approaches government. Of course, it's a

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  I really don't have any information on the illegal fishery, other than the current herring fishery that is going on in the salmon farming industry, which I see as an illegal fishery. I don't know anything about commercial fishermen fishing illegally.

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton

Fisheries committee  Thank you for allowing me to participate. While Fisheries and Oceans Canada characterizes its regulation of salmon farms as rigorous and tells Canadians that these regulations support the health of wild fish, this is not entirely accurate, on three substantive issues: bycatch in

June 17th, 2019Committee meeting

Alexandra Morton