CBC Prince Edward Island - Features - A line in the water - The dispute - Action News
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CBC Prince Edward Island - Features - A line in the water - The dispute
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A Line in the water
  Main > The Dispute

The Dispute

CBC News Online | Nov. 23, 2004
 

There was a time when seiners were kept farther off Prince Edward Island's shores, out past the 25 fathom mark. That's 150 feet of water between the surface and the ocean floor at any time.

When the rules changed is as murky as the floor of the Northumberland Strait after a good Nor'easter.

Sometime in the 1980s the line moved to 17 fathoms. Allister Surette, the man appointed to mediate the dispute last year, searched for document but could not find it.

The documents that brought the seiners closer to the shores of the Island, Surette learned, were burned in a fire.

The P.E.I. government argues that, since those documents do not exist, the federal minister should move the line back out to 25 fathoms.

Political debate was set aside as the dispute came to a head on the Souris wharf last October. When the herring seiners tried to land their catch there, local fishermen blockaded the wharf.

They have a right to use the port because it is a designated federal port, meaning it can be used by a variety of vessels.

Gerald MacLean Gerald MacLean, 60, from North Lake, P.E.I., one of 14 fishermen arrested early in the morning, stands outside the RCMP detachment in Montague, P.E.I. on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2003. MacLean was injured when his face struck the pavement during his arrest at the Souris wharf.

Fishermen were blocking the road to keep trucks from leaving with herring caught by New Brunswick seiners. (CP PHOTO/Andrew Vaughan)

The police came, arrests were made, the blockade was broken. Eventually, the herring schools moved toward Cape Breton, and the herring seiners followed.

In 2004, the new federal Minister of Fisheries, Geoff Regan, presented what he feels is a fair compromise based on what his department's scientists are telling him. The line was moved to 20 fathoms, with a scientific fishery between 17 and 20 fathoms. Regan said the scientific fishery would gather information on amount of fish being caught closer to the shore.

The provincial government and Island fishermen are complaining that the scientific fishery is too large. Seiners can catch up to 15 per cent of their total Gulf of St. Lawrence quota in that 17 to 20 fathom zone.

As with many compromises, neither side was happy. The seiners complained. They will be back fishing off the Island's shores, and intend to land their catch in Souris. Island fishermen have strongly suggested they will do what they can to stop them.

 

 
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Related Links

DFO's 2004 herring management plan

Allister Surette's report on the conflict (1 MB)
(Acrobat Reader required - download free Acrobat ReaderDownload Acrobat PDF plug-in)

Value of marine fisheries - Government of P.E.I.

The Maritime Fishermen's Union

Atlantic Herring - Gulf of Maine Aquarium

Oceans Act - Government of Canada

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Media

From CBC P.E.I.
Oct. 21, 2004:
Ian Petrie reviews why the fishermen on P.E.I. are upset about the seiners. (runs 5:27) Click to watch RealVideo file

Oct. 22, 2004: Nancy Russellvisits northern N.B. to learn why the herring seiners work is so important.
(runs 4:29) Click to watch RealVideo file

Oct. 25, 2004: Nancy Russell shares the concerns N.B. residents had with the herring seiners. (runs 7:13)Click to watch RealVideo file


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