Controversial changes to Fisheries Act guided by industry demands

GLORIA GALLOWAY

OTTAWA - The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, Aug. 05 2013, 9:51 PM EDT

Last updated Tuesday, Aug. 06 2013, 10:18 AM EDT

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/fisheries-act-change-guided-by-industry/article13606358/

The federal Conservative government consulted with both environmental 
organizations and industry associations before making controversial changes to 
the Fisheries Act last year, but listened primarily to industry.

When a section of one of the government's massive 2012 omnibus budget bills 
limited the scope of the legislation governing the protection of fish and their 
habitats, some ecologists said it was the biggest setback to conservation law 
in more than 50 years.

One of the most significant changes was to remove the broad protections that 
covered all fish habitats and to specify the law would now prohibit only 
"serious harm" to fish "that are part of a commercial, recreational or 
aboriginal fisheries, or to fish that support such a fishery."

Documents released recently to The Globe and Mail under federal access to 
information laws suggest that wording was offered by industry associations.

In 2010, the High Park Group consulting firm was commissioned by the Department 
of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to gather industry and business observations 
about the habitat protection provisions of the Fisheries Act. The feedback was 
not good.

The 23 organizations that were consulted, which included the Canadian 
Electricity Association (CEA), the Canadian Hydropower Association (CHA) and 
the Saskatchewan Chamber of Commerce (SKCC), roundly criticized the law.

The associations argued that it was too unpredictable, that it caused 
considerable barriers to infrastructure investment, and that it increased 
regulatory costs and timelines. "CEA/CHA and SKCC call for modification of the 
act's definition of 'fishery' to clarify that it refers to 'commercial, 
recreational, subsistence or aboriginal use of fish as a resource,' " the 
consultant's report said.

The High Park Group pointed out, however, that there was a dearth of evidence 
to back industry concerns and a "lack of cogent and substantive documentation 
of industry positions on the issue."

Meanwhile, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans was providing another point 
of view after consulting with numerous environmental organizations between 2006 
and 2009.

In a report also released under access laws, the department said the 
environmental groups praised the Fisheries Act saying it is "one of the 
strongest laws in Canada that can be used to protect our environment" and urged 
the government to strengthen and enforce it.

Many of those groups were shocked and furious when the changes to the Fisheries 
Act were unveiled in the budget bill last year.

The Fisheries department said in an e-mail this week that it is still focusing 
on preserving fish habitat but "is adopting a practical, common-sense approach 
that focuses on managing threats to Canada's recreational, commercial and 
aboriginal fisheries and the fish and fish habitat on which they depend."

But critics said it is clear that the government has allowed industry to write 
the law. "What we see here is a government listening only to industry 
concerns," said Andrew Gage of West Coast Environmental Law, one of the 
environmental groups that were consulted by the DFO before the law was 
rewritten. "When laws are written to pander to particular industries, Canadians 
get weak environmental laws, and weak protection for our fish."

John Bennett, the executive director of Sierra Club Canada, said "the federal 
government ignored serious advice from environmental organizations and accepted 
undocumented knee-jerk advice from self-interest industry groups who could not 
substantiate their complaints."

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said the department has obviously lifted 
"holus-bolus from industry comments a new definition for what a fishery is and 
completely [ignored] the comments from a wide consultation from people on the 
ground who are actually protecting the fishery." And Robert Chisholm, the NDP 
fisheries critic, said the government has subsequently had trouble writing 
regulations because department officials know "that if they continue to go down 
this direction that they are going to devastate the ability of the DFO to 
protect fish habitat."



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