The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
24 April 2017
Plain language, power, and politics #nlpoli
Jacqueline Perry is the regional director of fisheries management for the fisheries and oceans department of the Government of Canada. "This is difficult stuff," she said, referring to reductions in quotas that the decisions that flow from the scientific information on fish stocks will have an adverse impact on people in the fishing industry.
"We are doing the very, very best that we can with the information that our science colleagues are able to provide to us with the input of industry. Are we getting it 100 per cent right? I don't know if we will ever know [about the precise size of fish stocks]."
In related comments, the head of the Marine Institute's fisheries science program told CBC that the "fact that there is so much controversy is indicative that communication is a necessary component … If we're going to find a way forward, we're going to have to keep talking." Brett Favaro said the Marine Institute will include course work in the master's and doctoral programs aimed at teaching scientists how to communicate their research findings more effectively.
He's talking about plain language, among other things. Plain language or Plain English establishes some simple rules about the way you use words and sentences in order to ensure the greatest number of people will understand what you are saying.
06 October 2015
The smallest details tell the biggest story #nlpoli
Last week, provincial fisheries minister Vaughn Granter held a news conference at a local restaurant known for its seafood dishes to announce that from now on, that restaurant and even ordinary consumers could buy fish.directly from a fisherman without facing any legal problems.
That may sound a bit odd to some people but truth be told the provincial government has for decades banned direct sales to consumers. Ostensibly it was based on concerns over public health but in truth it was just another way the government tried to control the hell out of the fish business.
Wonderful news.
But the really fascinating detail was buried away in Granter’s speaking notes.
10 June 2015
The cost of out-dated ideas #nlpoli
New Brunswick fishermen can't steam across the Gulf of St. Lawrence and sell their product in Corner Brook because of restrictions on their license.
They are same sort of restrictions that apply to local fishermen and which lay at the heart of regressive measures like minimum processing requirements. The result is that fish processors in this province lose out on product for their plants and fish plant workers can't get enough work.
Don't believe it?
Check out a recent story in l'Acadie Nouvelle. [translation by google and SRBP]
"They are interested. They saw the quality of .my crab and they asked me how they could do to access other crab like that. I replied that the best way would be to open a factory in the Acadian Peninsula. Sure, between showing interest and actually doing it, there still has work to do, but at least they can learn," he said.
12 January 2015
Roger Grimes: savage political attack dog #nlpoli
Maybe it was the headline on John Ivison’s opinion piece in the National Post that threw them off.
Spat over $400M N.L. fund could make federal government look bad to European trade partners
Provincial Conservatives, their patronage clients, and their paid staffers were all over Twitter all weekend tweeting touting the support in Ivison’s piece for their fight with the federal Conservatives over a federal cheque for $280 million.
Pay up feds, says Ivison, and end this dispute because it looks bad.
The problem for the Conservatives is that if you read the whole Ivison column, this is not a great endorse of the provincial Conservatives’ desperate political ploy. It offers sensible advice in that both sides need to get this dispute settled now, but Ivison gets there based on all sorts of half-baked ideas. That much of it shows the extent to which observers both at home and outside the province don’t really understand what’s going on here.
And if you follow the piece through to the end, you see just exactly how bad a position Paul Davis and his crowd really are.
23 May 2014
Politics and the Fishery #nlpoli
For those who missed it, here’s the podcast from the Fisheries Broadcast for May 22, complete with your humble e-scribbler talking about politics and the fishery.
-srbp-
19 December 2013
Province abandons fisheries policy…quietly #nlpoli
Two years.
That’s all it took to destroy the provincial government’s historic fisheries policy that had been built on the highly successful state-controlled model pioneered by such economic powerhouses as the Soviet Union, Albania, and North Korea.
17 August 2012
Navigator Online #nlpoli
Turn your browser to a new blog from The Navigator.
For those who don’t know it, The Navigator is a monthly magazine about the fishery for people in the industry in Atlantic Canada and the northeastern United States.
The Skipper’s Blog is written by managing editor Jaime Baker, late of the Telegram and the Fish, Food and Allied Workers’ Union. The subject matter for blog posts will likely be some aspect of the fishery but as Jaime told SRBP on Thursday, it could include other issues. One post this week was about the young boy who offered his soccer medal to the Canadian men’s relay team.
Jamie’s most recent post is about a story this week about a resurgence in cod stocks:
While many outside the fishery may not have moved on from cod after the moratorium, the fishermen and the industry certainly did.
Last year’s $1 billion fishery was built largely on crab and shrimp. Believe it or not, a resurgence in cod right now to historic levels would actually throw a bit of a monkey-wrench into that industry.
How? Two ways.
One, cod are voracious predators and they tend to eat things like shrimp and juvenile crab (and anything else that is around). Most fishermen will tell you, in places where the cod are scarce, the shellfish tend to do well; and in places where the cod are plenty, the shellfish tend to not do well at all. And we should note there was very little in the way of crab or shrimp in this part of the world when the cod fishery was rocking out like The Who on speedballs. In fact, some scientists will tell you the fact that we have had crab and shrimp in these numbers is an anomaly.
His second point is that the local industry has re-oriented away from cod to the point where they’d have a hard time handling any sizable landings.
Other than maybe on the fisheries broadcast, that likely isn’t the sort of stuff you’ve been hearing. Check out Jaime’s blog: the opinions are both frank and well-informed.
-srbp-
28 May 2012
The Other Damn-Fool Fisheries Policy #nlpoli #cdnpoli
About 30 years ago, Kathy Dunderdale started out her political career fighting against fisheries reform.
Last December, she scolded fish plant workers in Marystown for turning out 18 weeks work that would have qualified them for employment insurance and kept their plant open.
She continued her fight against fisheries reform over the weekend in a series of interviews with national media about the federal government’s proposed changes to the employment insurance system.
20 April 2012
Tightening up EI access #nlpoli #cdnpoli
People drawing unemployment insurance in the Atlantic provinces might be in for a new way of life in the near future, if changes to the Employment Insurance system turn out as described by the National Post on Wednesday:
What we will be doing is making people aware there’s hiring going on and reminding them that they have an obligation to apply for available work and to take it if they’re going to qualify for EI,” Mr. Kenney told the National Post editorial board on Wednesday. …
The reforms would require unemployed Canadians to accept local jobs that are currently being filled by temporary foreign workers.
The story includes an example of Nova Scotia Christmas tree farmers who have to bring in Mexican workers to harvest trees in the fall. Unemployment in Nova Scotia is running at 8.3% according to Statistics Canada. Newfoundland and Labrador’s unemployment rate is 13%, the highest in the country.
Changes to Employment Insurance could have a significant impact on seasonal workers in Newfoundland and Labrador. Historically, they and the companies they work for have been heavily dependent on federal subsidies. The fishing industry, already under pressure to reform, would face profound changes under the changes.
-srbp-
06 April 2012
Patronage and seals… #nlpoli
Thursday’s announcement by fisheries minister Darin King should give you a pretty big reminder that the local political scene remains mired in the past.
The provincial government is giving a private sector company a $3.6 million. They are calling it a loan. In effect, the provincial government is going to pay a cash subsidy directly to fishermen to kill twice as many seals as the company involved could buy. That’s according to a company official at the news conference on Thursday.
Interestingly enough, this is exactly the type of subsidy that helped to decimate the cod stocks since it encourages fishermen to over-harvest the resource. The excuse for it is much the same as well: it is supposedly just bridge financing to help the industry get through some difficult times now. Things will get better in the future.
There’s no truth in it of course. There never has been. Those are just the official excuses the politicians need to avoid the decisions that are tough but that would actually improve the fishery.
Even more interestingly, there’s a growing international effort to wipe out these subsidies. Yet while people around the world are trying to change the behaviour that led to the loss of our fish stocks, the locals are just carrying on as if everything was just peachy.
This looming change in the fishery and the fish markets is part of the story behind the more recent fisheries crisis, by the way, but that’s another issue.
One sentence in the seal subsidy release leaped out. it’s down towards the bottom. It’s vague and written in the passive voice, which likely means the person who wrote the release was just filling up space. Here’s the claim:
The value of the industry to the provincial economy has been estimated at close to $100 million in total in recent years.
“has been estimated”.
By whom?
Well certainly not the provincial government. The fisheries department website gives information for three years. They are from a time before the most recent collapse of the markets:
The Sealing Industry contributed on average approximately $16 million to harvester’s income, and approximately $37 million to the provincial economy in the last three years:
- 2006: approximately $30 million in landed value and approximately $55 million to the provincial economy.
- 2007: approximately $11 million in landed value and approximately $32 million to the provincial economy.
- 2008: approximately $7 million in landed value and approximately $24 million to the provincial economy.
From $30 million in landed value and $55 million in total in 2006 to a mere $7.0 million in landed value and $24 million total value two years later.
So $100 million in total value to the economy? Only, if you add up a bunch of years and that doesn’t seem to be what they meant.
This province won’t have a viable, local fishing industry in the future as long as the provincial government sticks with bad policy ideas like doling out cash to fishermen and local companies as they did in the seal announcement on Thursday.
- srbp -
16 February 2012
The fishery of the future, DFO version #nlpoli #cdnpoli
The Department of Fisheries and Oceans is holding a consultation on the future direction of the commercial fishery in Canada. it builds off the sustainable fisheries framework announced in 2009.
Click on the picture to head off to the part of the website where you can leave your comments online.
Here’s how the DFO website describes it:
Canada is blessed to be rich in natural resources, including the longest coastline in the world. It is estimated that 80,000 Canadians make their livings directly from fishing and fishing related activities.
Fisheries and Oceans Canada is committed to supporting the economic profitability of those fisheries, while striving to ensure that fish stocks are healthy and abundant for future generations. The Department is modernizing the way it does business to enable the industry to address both current and future challenges. This will ultimately lead to fisheries that are more sustainable, more profitable and more globally competitive for the long term. Fisheries and Oceans Canada has already taken some important steps after considering feedback from industry, Aboriginal groups and others. But more needs to be done.
The Department is talking with Aboriginal groups, the fishing industry, non-governmental organizations and fisheries experts, as well as the Canadian public. We recognize the importance of transparency as we move forward with specific elements of fisheries management modernization. We also appreciate the value that diverse perspectives can bring to the development of these policies. Together, we will build a path towards a more sustainable, stable and economically prosperous fishing industry.
There’s also a consultation document [pdf] that lays out the basis for the discussion. You can also find the bits of it and some presentations broken down for easier reading online at the DFO website: here.
This will get you started. Your humble e-scribbler will be looking at some specific aspects of this consultation over the next week or so as well as on some of the other issues that people in this province should be addressing but aren’t.
A warning: if you think that this set of 1980s solutions to 1970s problems from the last provincial election represents the cutting edge of fisheries policy for the 21st century, you will probably not be too comfortable reading any of this stuff.
- srbp -
28 January 2012
Bad sign #nlpoli #cdnpoli
The basic problem in the fishery is that the provincial fisheries minister has too much control over the industry and - inevitably - tends to use it all for political purposes rather than for the good of the industry.
So fisheries minister Darin King’s answer to the current mess in the industry is to go looking for more power for the fisheries minister.
Nothing good can come of that.
Nothing.
But it also shows just how fundamentally screwed up things are.
Oh yes, and you can’t slide a sheet of paper between the parties on their fisheries policy. King’s latest idea is straight out of the same worn-out playbook the provincial Liberals pushed in the last election. And it’s the same as the bullshit the NDP is pushing with their claim that the problem is corporate greed.
Damn fool ideas from the lot of them.
- srbp -
09 January 2012
A familiar, fishy tale #nlpoli
Scientists told some American fishermen before Christmas that the cod the fishermen depend on for their livelihood are in danger of disappearing unless the fishermen change their ways.
Frig off, say the fishermen.
People from this province will recognise the drama. Evidence says one thing. A whole bunch of people deny it.
The drama continues to this day in Newfoundland and Labrador as the same people who have fought steadfastly against reforming the fishery continue their struggle.
You can spot the denial experts because they all got sucked in by a news release from the fisheries department last week. ‘Ocean Choice International Denied Permanent Redfish Exemption” screamed the headline. Hooray, screamed the Deniers. That’ll teach the Latest Evil Ones that they cannot pull a fast one.
Yes folks, there is no crisis.
It’s all just made up.
Now of course, the provincial government won’t grant a permanent exemption. The fisheries minister and his colleagues are still in denial about the scope of the fisheries crisis and the need for dramatic change.
But in a few weeks time, Darin King will have to do something. Odds are he will give OCI what it really wants, namely the end of restrictions on its processing licenses that force the company to process fish in this province even if it isn’t profitable to do so.
They won‘t be permanent exemptions.
But they company will get exemptions.
The reason is right there in the release:
“Yesterday we learned that OCI intends to proceed with plans to fish redfish from quotas purchased from license holders in Nova Scotia. The company has said if we provide an exemption, they will land the fish in Newfoundland and Labrador, otherwise it would be landed elsewhere.”
Then you put that with King’s guiding principles, as reported by the Telegram:
… no [provincial] government subsidies for the fishery, and making moves that maximize the benefit of the resource for Newfoundlanders and Labradorians.
King is just pretending because he is politically jammed up. He gets praised today but in a few days or weeks, the same people will be attacking him.
Denying reality is a familiar, fishy tale whether you are in New England or Newfoundland.
The only difference is how long it takes for reality to take hold.
- srbp -
04 January 2012
Christmas Goodies #nlpoli #cdnpoli
A couple of provocative articles turned up online over the holidays. Now that everyone is getting back into the work-a-day groove, check them out.
Energy consultant Tom Adams took a hard look at Muskrat Falls and gave it a failing grade. Adams doesn’t limit his comments to the MF project alone. He also takes a look at the current rate structure:
The prevailing electricity rate structure for service on the island also suggests that the government is not serious about seeking the lowest cost options for meeting the province’s energy needs. The sale of power during the winter is highly subsidized, with the financial losses recovered by overcharging the rest of the year. Although this rate design is normal utility practice in far too many jurisdictions, given the cost structure for the power sector on the island where two thirds of the power is supplied by hydro-electric facilities, this practice is particularly wasteful of public resources. It would be interesting to know how much potential energy from on-island hydro-electric facilities is spilled during the spring, summer and fall. The prevailing rate structure encourages electric heating, where the power to drive those electric heaters is derived from oil. Using the oil directly for heating would be about three times as efficient as using the oil indirectly through electricity. If the government was really serious about mitigating the high economic and environmental costs of oil-fired generation, why would such a wasteful pricing methodology be allowed to persist?
How much gets spilled, Tom? Crap loads. The island is also in a situation where huge amounts of hydro currently spill because of deficiencies in the interconnection between the main part of the island and the bit where a goodly part of the population lives.
As for the pricing structure, that’s the result of a chronic lack of policy direction from the provincial government and weakened oversight by the regulator. It’s the same climate that spawned the Muskrat Falls monster.
When you are done with that, take a look at the second biting online commentary by CBC’s John Furlong. He’s the host of the Fisheries Broadcast and one of the most seasoned journalists in the province. That gives him an impressive background which, of course, is the polite way of saying “he’s seen it all and he doesn’t swallow the bullshit”.
An example:
The union might not like it, the people in Marystown might not like it, and the people in Port Union might not like it, but it's time to lay down the over-heated rhetoric, be in the vanguard of this change and do something constructive.
You can tell Furlong is hitting the target by the vicious personal attacks on him from the anonyturds in the comments section of the CBC website. This is his second sharply worded opinion piece. it really livens up the CBC website. Here’s hoping they make more use of him.
- srbp -
14 December 2011
Chainsaw Earle #nlpoli
Fisheries union Earle McCurdy took a political chainsaw to the provincial government on Tuesday, accusing the governing Conservatives of buying “right into [OCI’s] sales pitch without there being any evidence of trying to negotiate anything better.”
McCurdy claimed that if OCI gets permission to export fish for processing, then the province is “on the brink of a major loss of control over public resources.”
According to the Telegram:
McCurdy argued that corporate greed was behind the plant closures, and the government should be pressing more aggressively to protect processing jobs in the province.
For his part, fisheries minister Darin King accused McCurdy of playing games.
As CBC reported:
"Playing games, spreading propaganda and not keeping the best interest of the people in mind is not the way to go about it," King told reporters.
"I think that this is exactly what the FFAW is doing, and I believe wholeheartedly that it is inappropriate, irresponsible, and not certainly in the best interests of the members of the union."
King is right on everything except one point. McCurdy may not be acting in the best interests of the plant workers or the people of the province.
But Earle doesn’t get paid to act in his members’ best interests, nor does he give a toss for the best interests of the fishery or the province.
He can take a chainsaw to anyone and to anything he wants. Facts don’t matter. Worst case scenario: the plants close, a few of his members are out of work but another bunch are working full-time to pay dues. McCurdy looks like he fought for the guys on the unemployment line. He gets to keep his job.
All we are seeing is lowest common denominator politics of the worst kind.
And McCurdy’s good at it.
- srbp -
12 December 2011
Change in the fishery #nlpoli
Ocean Choice International’s Martin Sullivan was the guest this week on CBC’s On Point. That’s a link to a CBC story that includes the whole program.
The most obvious point about Sullivan’s argument is that it is – essentially – simple and sensible. The company needs to export fish in a form the market wants. The company was losing money in the two plants it closed.
The second segment of the show was an interview with fisheries minister Darin King. The most obvious thing about King’s comments is that he now - i.e. after OCI announced closures - sounds like someone who understands the need for fundamental changes in the fishery. That’s something no one has said before, including Premier Kathy Dunderdale and her remarks blaming the union for not accepting a mere 18 weeks of work.
In the political panel, former Tory cabinet minister Shawn Skinner suggests that the MOU process fell apart and that now OCI has pushed things forward. No surprise there for anyone who has been paying attention, but for some people this will be a smack in the gob.
No surprise either that Lana Payne had nothing positive to offer in either her assessments of the situation or possible solutions. Siobhan Coady was marginally better, suggesting that the correct role for the provincial government was to squeeze the processors to ensure people in this province got work in at-sea processing. That’s really just continuing the approach that created the current mess in the fishery and it’s not surprising that Lana Payne could chime in and agree with the idea.
Ditto Coady’s suggestion that the provincial government should be assisting the companies with marketing. That might have been a possible option a couple of years ago, but no longer.
But to then have Payne and Coady suggest that the provincial government needs to get on with the restructuring process was bordering on the laughable. They just don’t get it.
All you have to do is go back and listen to Skinner again: the MOU is dead and the government and the union are left to play catch-up as the companies drive the restructuring agenda. That’s the reality and both Coady and Payne are woefully out of touch.
When you’re done with that, flip over to a commentary by fisheries broadcast host John Furlong:
Change is always hard. Even 'good' change. When you buy a house or have a baby or get a new job. Change is still hard.
It's even harder in the fishery. If you ask most people in the fishery today how they would like the fishery of tomorrow to look, they'll say "like it was yesterday."
That's not the way it's going to be.
Heck, the fishery of today isn’t the fishery of yesterday as much as some people have been trying to pretend otherwise.
- srbp -
Related: “Building the fishery of the future”, one of the 15 ideas series (June 2011)
06 December 2011
The Wheel of Fish #nlpoli
Remember that thing about not being able to slide a sheet of paper between the three political parties on major issues?
Well, it continues to play out on the fishery.
Ocean Choice International announced on Friday it is closing a couple of plants that have been struggling for some time.
The provincial government - via Premier Kathy Dunderdale - blames the union for rejecting an offer to keep a couple of hundred people on the payroll long enough every year to qualify for federal hand-outs.
The latest fisheries minister repeats the government’s policy that fights against any reorganization of a fishery that everyone knows has too many people and way too many plants in it for anyone to make a decent living without government handouts.
He threatens to hold up a decision on OCI’s export licenses unless the company delivers guarantees that the company will not close other plants.
The Liberals blame the Tories. Bring out the “regulatory arsenal”, the Liberal news release screams, in order to to stop ”giveaways”. Now there’s a novel idea: politicians interfering in the fishery. What was the definition of stupid, again?
The union-controlled New Democrats blame the company and province’s governing Tories for the mess. What would they support? Something that involves more government interference in the fishery which is, not surprisingly what both the Liberals and the Conservatives think is the right and new thing to do.
And around and around the political merry-go-round spins, apparently, without any sense of the human tragedy caused by decades of exactly the same ideas they push as if no one has heard them before.
All three parties pretend that the central problem in the fishery doesn’t exist. “The central problem of the fishery today”, as your humble e-scribbler wrote in September, “is that stocks have been decimated by decades of overfishing as a result of government policies that encouraged too many people to enter the fishery than it could sustain economically or environmentally without hundreds of millions annually in federal and provincial government subsidies.”
The Liberal release, in keeping with the party’s election platform, might actually be the stupidest position of the three parties. But in fairness, they are mere millimetres beyond the Conservatives and the New Democrats on the stunned-arse scale.
Derek Butler is executive director of an association of fish processing companies. In the Monday Telegram, Butler argues that only “change and a modern competitive fishery designed to perform to the market can work.” He’s right.
But that is exactly the fishery that the politicians have fought against for decades. The politicians had a choice. They could manage the change or just let it happen. The former offered the chance of stability, order and control. The latter could wind up being brutal and savage with an unpredictable outcome. One is a jaunt; the other a manic storm of motion and fury.
Well, with OCI’s decision last week, they don’t have a choice any more.
Their merry-go-round ride just turned into a roller coaster without seatbelts or rails.
- srbp -
Related:
02 December 2011
And so it begins (fishery restructuring version) #nlpoli #cdnpoli
News today that OCI will permanently close two of its fish plants is merely the start of it.
The hurricane of change that is sure to follow will make the 1992 cod moratorium seem like a gentle breeze.
- srbp -
24 November 2011
Suck it up, buttercup #nlpoli
Ocean Choice international is a local fishing company. The key players in the company are from the Sullivan family.
You will recall one member of the family - Loyola - was a key cabinet minister in the Tory administration that started in office in 2003. He is now used to be a federal fisheries ambassador.
Another offshoot of the family served as chief of staff to Tom Rideout – right, exactly as illustrated - for the 43 days the fellow was premier.
Ocean Choice International, as a company, profited hugely while Tom was fisheries minister under Danny Williams. The provincial government interfered left, right and centre in the fishing industry. Rideout seemed to have it as a personal mission to torture one company - Fishery Products International - to death.
Rideout ranted about the company in every venue he could find . Danny Williams joined in the assault. Rideout started a prosecution against the company for supposed illegal export of fish from its Marystown plant for processing overseas.
Williams and Rideout pushed changes to the law governing FPI through the House of Assembly to make running the company much more difficult than it already was given the unwarranted political attacks Williams, Rideout and the rest of the Tory administration waged against the locally-based international fishing company.
Ultimately, Rideout and Williams succeeded in smashing FPI to bits.
The profitable stuff, like the FPI brands, the marketing arm and an overseas subsidiary wound up going to fishing companies outside the province.
OCI scooped up a bunch of fish plants, some other odds and ends and the FPI headquarters Building in St. John’s with its large, beautiful boardroom. OCI sold the building very shortly afterward.
As the Telegram reported at the time:
According to a conveyance filed at the registry, OCI got $3.335 million for the building, located at 70 O'Leary Ave. in St. John's.
The buyer is Deacon Investments Ltd., whose sole director is local businessman Dean MacDonald.
OCI’s Martin Sullivan spoke to a board of trade luncheon on Tuesday. Sullivan whined and moaned about the state of the province’s fisheries. He bawled especially big tears over the heavy hand of government interference.
According to the Telegram’s account of the speech, “Sullivan pointed to yellowtail as an example” of the problems with government interference in processing and marketing.
This is an especially rich moment. processing yellowtail flounder in China was a key part of Rideout’s ongoing persecution of FPI. Ocean Choice and the Sullivans swooped in to take up the bits of FPI Rideout shook loose.
A couple of years later Sullivan and OCI found themselves in exactly the same place FPI was. The provincial government is shagging around with the company over the exports yet again.
No one should shed any tears over OCI’s current predicament. They who live by the unholy sword of government interference can’t really expect sympathy when they start getting the same shaft right up to the hilt.
People like Sullivan who represent the fishery of the past ought not to have any say in determining the fishery of the future. That is, not unless Martin and his friends are willing to compensate the public treasury for the occasions when they profited from the interference he now bitches about.
Otherwise, Sullivan and his compatriots and just suck it up and leave the future of the fishery to other people who have an ounce of credibility.
- srbp -
Related: Liberal fisheries critic Jim Bennett wants equal time at the board of trade to rebut Sullivan largely with a dose of the same thinking that helped create the current mess.
What the crowd at the board of trade – proponents of the Maximum Government Interference school of free enterprise thinking – have already heard it all before.
What the board of trade could use is a dose of some original ideas, even if they wouldn’t like them. That’s the only way we might build a successful fishery of the future.
19 September 2011
The Damn-Fool Fisheries Policy
Yesterday’s man delivered yesterday’s ideas and claimed it was the future.
Liberal leader Kevin Aylward unveiled his party’s fisheries platform on Friday. As a historical document, it would be wonderful for an election from 1975. But in 2011, the colourful pamphlet serves only to remind everyone just how far out of touch its authors are with the province and its people 20 years after the collapse of the cod stocks.
The central problem of the fishery today is that stocks have been decimated by decades of overfishing as a result of government policies that encouraged too many people to enter the fishery than it could sustain economically or environmentally without hundreds of millions annually in federal and provincial government subsidies.
The Liberal policy for the fishery of the future is to return to the very policies that led to its current sorry state in the first place.
One can scarcely imagine anything more stupid.
Take the cod stocks, reduced to the point that by 1992 the federal government had to shut down the fishery that brought Europeans to this place 500 years ago. There were no fish left, at least for any commercially viable industry.
The cod numbers – the biomass – are not appreciably larger in 2011 than it was in 1992.
Well, armed with that knowledge, the Liberals want to increase the total allowable catch for the endangered cod to more than double its current level.
There is not a shred of scientific evidence to back them up.
None.
Common sense would tell you to stop fishing altogether.
The Liberals are having none of that sort of talk.
They want to double the current slaughter.
They are not content to let professionals get the last codfish from the sea. The Liberals want to widen the Damn Fool Fishery to boot.
And to ensure they can find every last fish, the Liberals want to continue the current Tory policy of spending provincial cash on “fisheries science.”
On the surface, it sounds like a good idea – more knowledge is good – but if you look at the end purpose, you realise what the Liberals want to do.
Conservation and sound management are not the objectives the people who wrote this policy had in mind. If it was, they wouldn’t advocate resuming the cod slaughter. This is a plan to find the last fish so someone can split it and freeze it into a block for export with taxpayers footing the bill for most of it.
And when the fish are gone, they’ll be on the sea snails, the sea cucumbers and the krill.
The Liberals want to set up $250 million for what would likely be a batch of make-work projects. They call it a Fisheries Investment and Diversification Fund but those are code words, to be sure.
The “employment rebate” for processors is nothing more than committing taxpayers to cover the salaries of fish plant workers in businesses that would not survive economically without more government handouts.
Worst of all, the Liberals want to bring back the Fisheries Loan Board.
To understand the significance of this, you have to go back to the 1970s. With the 200 mile limit in 1977 cam policies designed to increase the number people in the fishery. Fish that used to be taken by foreigners were available only to Canadians once the 200 mile limit came into effect.
Both the federal and provincial governments abandoned plans to reform the fishery. Instead they created policies to draw more people into the industry. In 1976, there were 13,376 fishermen in the province. By 1980 there were 33,640. Total federal and provincial subsidies added up to about the same as the landed value of the catch.
The Fisheries Loan Board – provincial money for boats and gear – went from $12,488,000 in outstanding loans in 1976 to $43,796,000 in 1980. Most of the money was never repaid.
But as far as the goal of getting more people into an already over-stressed industry, the FLB was a stunning success.
The Liberals even resurrect the old chestnuts of co-management and joint management. And for good measure they repeat the asinine commitment to pay for federal jobs and add a new commitment to support Ryan Cleary’s quest to have taxpayers foot the bill for his education, a.k.a. the judicial inquiry into the fishery.
They don’t need an inquiry. Read anything by Memorial University economist William Shrank. He can tell what happened to the fish and why. A 1995 article in Marine Policy, titled “Extended fisheries jurisdiction: origin of the current crisis in Atlantic Canada’s fishery” is as good as any.
As for new ideas, the Liberal policy has none.
There’s just a vague reference to making sure the aquaculture industry has government financial support and that the Liberals will make sure that projects don’t harm the environment.
To be fair to the Liberals, and to the architects of their policy like Beaton Tulk, the Tories and New Democrats are pushing variations on the same pathetic theme.
But for people looking for some solution to the problems plaguing the fishery and the people who depend on it today, the province’s three political parties have basically left them with nothing to look forward to. What’s worse, if any of the political platforms make through to government policy, taxpayers will be on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars of wasted spending.
We know it is wasted because none of the ideas will work.
We know they won’t work because they failed in the past. Either that or, as in the case of joint management, for example, they are solutions that might have helped 30 years ago or more. But the problems they were supposed to fix simply don’t exist any more.
Today we face new problems created by the sorts of policies some people in the Liberal Party think are solutions to the problems those same policies created.
They couldn’t be any more wrong than they are.
On Friday, yesterday’s man delivered yesterday’s ideas and claimed it was the future.
He couldn’t have been any more wrong.
- srbp -