Fisheries Act Renewal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

Fisheries Act Renewal

Description:

Fisheries Act Renewal. Developing a Modern Tool. to Support New Directions ... A renewed Fisheries Act could provide direction on use of Minister's and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: ginasi4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Fisheries Act Renewal


1
Fisheries Act Renewal
  • Developing a Modern Tool
  • to Support New Directions
  • Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  • Presentation to NGOs, October 12, 2005

2
Contents
  • Context
  • What Is Needed in a Renewed Fisheries Act?
  • Elements of a Renewed Fisheries Act
  • Governance
  • Allocation
  • Licensing
  • Fisheries Co-Management
  • Administrative Sanctions
  • Habitat Management

3
Context
  • The current Fisheries Act dates back to 1857 it
    has served Canadians long and well, but does not
    reflect or respond to the evolving needs of the
    resource and to citizens expectations
  • Resource users and others have communicated the
    changes they seek in fisheries and fish habitat
    management Stable management framework
    allocation stability participatory
    decision-making co-management more effective
    enforcement and administrative sanctioning
  • Many policy and program changes have been made in
    recent years and some areas require legislative
    change

4
What is Needed in a New Fisheries Act
  • Statement of public purposes, values, management
    principles, to guide use of regulatory powers
    conferred by Parliament
  • Recognition of role of Provinces/Territories,
    commercial fleets, Aboriginal groups,
    recreational fishers and others in planning,
    policy-making and operations
  • Changes to promote stability for resource users
  • Longer-term licences and allocations
  • Provision for co-management with regulated
    population
  • Effective tools for managers and enforcement
    staff and a clear commitment to sustainable
    outcomes
  • Alternative to costly and slow criminal court
    system for fisheries infractions

5
Elements of a Renewed Fisheries Act
6
Governance
  • A renewed Fisheries Act could provide direction
    on use of Ministers and departments broad
    regulatory powers
  • A framework of values and guiding principles
    would bring Fisheries Act into line with modern
    governance practice
  • Minister and department would remain fully
    accountable to Parliament and Canadians for
    fisheries and fish habitat management

7
Governance
  • A proposed governance framework could include
  • Preamble to set the context
  • Purpose Clause
  • Fisheries and Habitat Management Principles
  • Access and Allocation Principles
  • Authority to set Licensing Policy
  • Authority to establish Advisory Bodies
  • Allocation Instrument, with any process
    requirements

8
Governance
  • Fisheries and Fish Habitat Management Principles
    could apply to entire Fisheries Act, including
    habitat management and inland fisheries
    management by Provinces/Territories for example
  • Conservation and protection of fisheries
    resources and their supporting habitat is the
    highest priority of management
  • Constitutional protection provided to aboriginal
    and treaty rights is to be taken into account in
    fisheries and fish habitat management
  • Management of fisheries resources and their
    supporting habitat shall apply
  • The Precautionary Approach
  • Risk management principles
  • Principles of integrated management, using an
    ecosystem approach
  • Principle of public engagement in decision-making
    including the use of traditional ecological
    knowledge
  • Fisheries and fish habitat management shall be
    public management

9
Governance
  • As complement to co-management arrangements with
    resource users, Minister could be authorized to
    establish standing or ad hoc Advisory Bodies to
    generate policy advice and provide broad public
    access into fisheries decision-making
  • Demonstrates our commitment to public engagement
    in resource management
  • Use these bodies for policy issues of broad
    public concern co-management arrangements would
    deal with operational issues and those internal
    to the group
  • Possible advisory structure models
  • Representative body drawn from groups having
    interest in or likely to be subject to decisions
    taken
  • Expert body to tender thoughtful, disinterested
    advice, especially on technical issues
  • Body to hold public hearings or solicit advice
    from affected constituencies and make
    recommendations
  • Problem-solving body (arbitration or mediation)
    as dispute settlement mechanism

10
Allocation
  • Current allocation (share-setting) process,
    especially for commercial fisheries, is often
    criticized for being unstable and unpredictable
  • However, there is also support for Minister to
    retain authority over access and allocation
  • Minister already establishes shares for
    fleets/groups of fishers for a fixed period of
    time (a practice rooted in policy) renewed
    Fisheries Act could lay out principles to govern
    future changes and the process for doing so

11
Allocation
  • Proposal could include
  • Allocation principles to guide future decisions
    in marine fisheries
  • Legal instrument to establish allocations to
    fleets or groups in commercial, recreational and
    Aboriginal fisheries in waters for specified
    number of years
  • Authority for Minister to name advisory body to
    hold public consultations, develop and provide
    public recommendations on those allocations
  • Ability to rescind, alter or replace allocation
    in given circumstances
  • Change would promote transparency, stability and
    predictability in allocation of fishery resources

12
Licensing
  • DFO licensing system has generally adapted well
    as fishery has evolved from open- to
    limited-entry and quota fisheries however,
    licensing provisions of Fisheries Act require
    updating
  • Act does not distinguish between access and
    allocation role of Minister and routine business
    of licence administration
  • There is no provision for Minister to issue
    long-term licences beyond 9 years without
    Governor in Council approval
  • Certain licensing practices, including charges
    for breach of the requirement to comply with
    licence conditions and some communal fishing
    licensing practices, have been questioned

13
Licensing
  • Proposal could include
  • Minister to set licensing policy in fisheries
    administered by DFO, departmental officials to
    administer licensing program
  • Overall licensing framework, administration rules
    and maximum number of licences prescribed in
    regulation
  • Organizations issued licences e.g. Aboriginal
    organizations would be expressly authorized to
    designate who would fish licence
  • Authority to attach licence conditions fishing
    contrary to conditions expressly prohibited
  • Fees set by ministerial order, parallel to Oceans
    Act
  • Ability for department to withhold licences under
    limited circumstances

14
Co-Management
  • Co-management is the sharing of responsibility
    and accountability for fisheries management
    results between DFO and resource users
  • Many successful co-management arrangements have
    been negotiated on all coasts over past decade
  • However, DFO has reached the limits of its legal
    and financial authorities
  • Resource users and others consistently call for
    more collaborative approach to resource
    management that makes greater use of
    co-management arrangements in fisheries managed
    by DFO

15
Co-Management
  • Proposal could include
  • Co-management tool which would allow the sharing
    of authority and accountability between DFO and
    responsible groups of resource users
  • Legally binding co-management agreements could
    specify
  • Harvesting rules for fishery, which become
    licence conditions
  • Supporting programs and services
  • Monitoring and other activities to be undertaken
    by the parties
  • Planning structures and processes
  • Funding arrangements
  • Administrative Sanctions formula
  • Provision to allocate fish to the organization to
    fund co-management activities under the agreement

16
Administrative Sanctions
  • Currently, Minister may suspend or cancel
    licences only for breaches of licence conditions
    breaches of regulations or general prohibitions
    of Act are dealt with in the context of a
    prosecution
  • Some resource users have called for establishment
    of an administrative sanctioning system as the
    primary tool for handling licence violations
  • An administrative tribunal or an internal process
    could sanction major and minor breaches of
    fisheries rules and regulations, including
    licence conditions, committed by licensed fishers

17
Administrative Sanctions
  • Proposal could include
  • Arms length administrative tribunals operating
    on east and west coasts to impose licence
    sanctions and associated supplemental financial
    penalties on licensed fishers could also hear
    licence appeals
  • Tribunal members would be independent, and
    experienced in and knowledgeable about fishery or
    administrative law
  • Alternative to tribunal model could be an
    independent internal sanctioning process
  • Fish habitat offences, offences in the inland
    fisheries managed by Provinces, and commercial
    poaching could remain in the court system

18
Habitat Management
  • DFO has made policy and program changes to
    improve effectiveness, efficiency and consistency
    in delivery of fish habitat conservation and
    protection responsibilities
  • In 2004, DFO launched Environmental Process
    Modernization Plan (EPMP), a continuous
    improvement plan to redefine the Habitat
    Management Program (HMP)
  • DFO is proposing amendments to the Habitat
    Protection Provisions and the Pollution
    Prevention Provisions of the Fisheries Act to
    clarify and strengthen the legislative framework
    for the HMP

19
Habitat Management
  • Possible changes to support Habitat program
    improvements could include
  • Greater ability to enforce non-compliance with
    conditions of authorizations of harm to fish
    habitat
  • Expanded powers of inspectors to include habitat
    protection provisions and to trespass
  • Clarify habitat protection provisions
  • Provide for alternatives to proceeding with
    charges and for directing fines for use in
    habitat restoration
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com