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News: Fraser River Fishery Could Fail in 2005

March 22nd : cbc.ca

OTTAWA---A new report says spawning levels were so low in 2004 that the commercial, recreational and aboriginal sockeye salmon fisheries on British Columbia's Fraser River could be wiped out in 2008.

The report released Tuesday by the Commons fisheries committee blames a failure by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to crack down on sockeye poaching in the region and implement previous recommendations designed to save the stock, as well as unusually warm water temperatures in 2004.

The result could be extremely low levels of adult salmon ready for harvesting three years from now and the cancellation of all fisheries for that year.

There's no way to tell how succeeding years will be affected until 2005 spawning levels are measured.

"The standing committee did a report in 2001, which was tabled in 2003, making pointed recommendations that would have solved some of the problems that we are facing today. The [former House of Commons Speaker John] Fraser report did the same thing," said Conservative committee member Loyola Hearn, who is also the party's fisheries critic.

"Both reports were completely and utterly ignored by government. What we need for the long-term is to get to the root of what caused the problems in 1992, 1994 and again this year."

Tom Wappel, the committee's Liberal chairman, was also critical of the federal fisheries department's efforts.

"We believe that if DFO had implemented the recommendations of previous inquiries, including those of the committee's 2003 report on the management of the 2001 fishery, the likelihood of the problems faced in 2004 would have been greatly lessened if not avoided entirely," he said in a news release.

The report makes 12 recommendations, including prohibiting the use of gillnets on parts of the Fraser, as well as increasing the enforcement of fisheries regulations on the lower Fraser.

The report says an "unreported and unauthorized sockeye harvest is believed to have greatly contributed to the 2004 disaster."

The committee says the fear of confrontation with First Nations groups led in part to the poor enforcement of regulations.

The report also cites record high temperatures in the river as a cause for the drop in numbers.

The committee says sockeye runs are unlikely to build back up to last year's levels before 2020.

Copyright (C) 2005 CBC. All rights reserved.v

Letter: Adverse affects of Government Cutbacks to Fisheries & Oceans

March 2nd

Nick Humphreys, RVP Environment Component BC/Yukon, has written a letter to Peter Stoffer, MP and NDP fisheries critic.

What we need, what Canada needs, are more resources put into the Department of Fisheries & Oceans, not less.  I have to assume that you are very aware of what happens to fish stocks when there are inadequate resources for the science behind stock assessments/biology, enforcement and enhancement.  I am of course referring to the northern cod.

Read more of Nick's letter (.pdf) below.

Letter_to_Peter_Stouffer.pdfLetter_to_Peter_Stouffer.pdf

Fisheries and Oceans - The Right to Do Our Jobs

This is the home of the campaign by workers at Fisheries and Oceans Canada in the Pacific Region. We maintain that funding cuts over the past two years, and cuts proposed in the future leave us in a position of being unable to fulfill legal mandates set out in the Fisheries Act, and other statues and laws.

DFO employees are no longer able to fulfill their mandates in stock assessment, fisheries enforcement, habit restoration, hatcheries and other salmon enhancement programs essential for the preservation and rebuilding of fish stocks. Dozens of jobs have already been lost with further cuts planned, the implementation of which will only accelerate the current trend of reduced fish populations until we reach the point where restoration is no longer possible.

Download the postcard  petition link is pdf document below, and mail it to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Call on the Canadian government to responsibly honour fisheries resources in BC by restoring and increasing funding to Fisheries and Oceans Canada. We owe it to Canadians to protect our fish stocks and the people whose livelihoods rely on them!

salmon_postcard.pdfsalmon_postcard.pdf


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