First Nations on Vancouver Island celebrate B.C. Court of Appeal fisheries ruling
VANCOUVER — Canada must remedy problems in commercial fishery regulations arising from a legal battle that was first launched in 2003 by a group of Vancouver Island First Nations, the British Columbia Court of Appeal has ruled.
While there is no demonstrated need to make mandatory orders, they would “remain available if Canada does not act diligently to remedy the problems,” Justice Harvey Groberman wrote in a decision released Monday.
A three-judge panel unanimously upheld parts of an April 2018 ruling by the B.C. Supreme Court that found Canada’s management of regular commercial fisheries unjustifiably infringed on the First Nations’ rights.
In that judgment, Justice Mary Humphries gave Ottawa one year to offer the plaintiffs opportunities to exercise their rights to harvest and sell salmon, groundfish, crab and prawn in a manner that remedied those infringements.