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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 103 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans.
This meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the Standing Orders.
Before I proceed, I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of witnesses and members. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those participating by video conference, click on the microphone icon to activate your mic, and please mute yourself when you are not speaking. For interpretation for those on Zoom, you have the choice, at the bottom of your screen, of floor, English or French. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel. Please address all comments through the chair.
Before we proceed, I simply want to remind members to be very careful when handling the earpieces, especially when your microphone or your neighbour's microphone is turned on. Earpieces placed too close to a microphone are one of the most common causes of sound feedback, which is extremely harmful to interpreters and causes serious injuries.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted on February 27, 2024, the committee is studying the subject matter of supplementary estimates (C).
On our first panel today, we are welcoming back to committee the Honourable Diane Lebouthillier, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, accompanied by Annette Gibbons, deputy minister; and Luc Robitaille, director general, budget planning and financial management. From the Canadian Coast Guard, we have Mr. Mario Pelletier, commissioner.
Thank you, Minister, for taking the time to appear today. You will have five minutes or less for your opening statement. The floor is yours.
I would first like to say that I am very happy to be here with you, colleagues, on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people, to present supplementary estimates (C) 2023-2024 on behalf of my department, the DFO.
In these supplementary estimates, I am seeking a majority of the funding for three key sectors of the department, a total of $102.3 million. First, $50 million will be allocated to the Salish Sea Initiative. That figure, which is carried forward from the previous year's department budget, will be used to establish an investment fund managed by indigenous people with the aim of providing long-term support for priority projects for the first nations, which seek to improve the health of the ecosystems in their traditional waters. Second, $30 million dollars will be devoted to the increase in the cost of marine fuel associated with the Canadian Coast Guard fleet. This funding will enable it to carry out the activities planned for this year, including by supporting conservation and environmental protection programs and undertaking law enforcement oversight activities at sea. Third, $11.6 million will be used to protect and promote the health of at-risk whale populations, such as the North Atlantic right whale, southern resident killer whales and the St. Lawrence Estuary beluga. If committee members have questions about these investments, my officials and I will be happy to provide more details after my presentation.
Before we do that, however, there are several points I would like to address. I am well aware that the members of this committee would like to talk about numerous other topics of discussion today.
I will start with redfish. In January, as you know, I announced the reopening of the Unit 1 commercial redfish fishery starting this year. Since this fishery had been under a moratorium for almost 30 years, I have to tell you that in the circumstances, this can only be good news. The first phase of the reopening of the commercial fishery will last two years. During that period, the redfish quota will be at least—and yes, I said at least—25,000 tonnes or more, based on the recommendations that come out of the meeting of the Redfish Advisory Committee that was held at the beginning of the month. I know there was also discussion of how the quota will be allocated among the fleets and measures for managing the fishery.
The department is currently compiling all of the comments on which certain decisions that must be made before the Unit 1 redfish fishery opens for the 2024 season will be based. While we are now in the very early stages of this reopening, I am sure that ultimately, when the industry has buckled down to the job, developed markets and strengthened its processing capacity, the redfish fishery will be a formidable economic development tool for our coastal communities. We know that between then and now there is work still to be done; that is why I have repeatedly said over recent months, and this is particularly true in the case of the shrimp boats, that the redfish fishery will not solve everything.
That brings me to my second point: the difficult situation currently facing shrimp fishers. First, allow me to express my full support for everyone who is affected, whether directly or indirectly, by the closing this week of the Fruits de mer de l'Est processing plant in Matane. I have to tell you that the closing of a fishery company is never good news, period.
As we know, the industry is facing multiple problems and challenges, and with climate change and the resulting heating of the oceans, everything underwater is in flux right now. The data presented by Fisheries and Oceans last week speaks for itself. The climate crisis is real and its effects are already being felt in our marine ecosystems. Shrimp has fallen victim to it, but other species will have to live with similar disruptions in the years to come. That is why a broader examination of the future of the fisheries is called for. We owe it to our children, our grandchildren and our great-grandchildren.
Just last week, I had a constructive meeting in Ottawa with representatives of the Association des capitaines-propriétaires de la Gaspésie, the Fédération régionale acadienne des pêcheurs professionnels, and the Fish, Food & Allied Workers. We addressed the difficult situation that shrimp boats in the St. Lawrence estuary and gulf are currently facing, and also the great importance of supporting fishers and processors in the region.
You may rest assured that between then and now, I will continue to keep open the channels of communication with the industry and with the indigenous communities and my provincial counterparts, in order to overcome, together, the climate challenges our coastal communities are facing at present.
Last, I want to talk about the eel fishery. As you know, I made the difficult decision last week to not open the 2024 eel fishery in the Maritimes and to not issue eel fishing licences. In recent years, the eel fishery has faced very serious challenges related to unauthorized fishing and impacts on conservation of the species, as well as threats and violence committed against fishers, fishery officers and other people.
I am perfectly aware that this fishery and the fisheries of other species are important to the economic health of our coastal communities. I want to stress once again that this decision was neither easy nor pleasant to make. However, responsible management of resources and public safety must always take precedence over everything else. That is why anyone who tries to fish for eels will be subject to law enforcement measures taken by fishery officers who are cooperating with other agencies to combat the unauthorized fishing, sale and possession of eels for export purposes.
Since last week, fishery officers have arrested at least 34 people and seized a considerable amount of equipment. In other words, fishery officers are doing their job: They are patrolling the rivers, facilities and points of export as we speak. Not only is it wrong to claim otherwise, it also encourages other people to commit illegal acts, which will lead to more arrests. Allow me to say that I find that despicable and downright irresponsible.
The department is continuing its work to make the necessary changes to the regulations and management, to ensure the safety and sustainability of the eel fishery for all fishers. The fishery will reopen only when these measures have been fully implemented.
On that note, thank you. I am now ready to answer your questions.
Thank you for being here, Minister.
Minister, your department was a funding partner of B.C.'s invasive mussel defence program that inspects watercraft at B.C.'s borders, but you allowed that funding to lapse last year, and that decision has directly weakened the most effective protection of B.C.'s waters against aquatic invasive species, especially zebra mussels and quagga mussels.
In 2022, your government supported the B.C. mussel defence program with $475,000. This was completely cut in 2023, and for 2024 you've announced only $90,000 for the program, a reduction of over 80%.
Why has your government abandoned B.C.'s invasive mussel defence program?
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Thank you for that answer, Minister. I hope that clears things up for the Conservative leader and a few others.
A number of us have been on this committee since 2015 or early 2016, and over that time I have to say that, as a group, this committee, with its various members, has been almost unanimous in focusing on the issue. The partisan stuff, of course, comes up every now and again, but the real focus is on doing what's best for our wild fish stocks and for the people who make a living from that and whose culture depends on it.
We have come up with any number of excellent reports with very solid recommendations. We have a concern that very few of those recommendations are ever acted on. I am wondering if, in your short time as minister, you've had the time to go back and assess the performance of the DFO in addressing the concerns that we've raised and our suggestions for how to resolve them.
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Thank you for the question.
I want to remind all my colleagues here today that I come from the Gaspé. As everyone knows, my riding is Gaspésie—Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine. I live with climate change. The fishers I meet with, whether in the Atlantic region or in Quebec, on the west coast, or even in the Arctic, are all concerned about the consequences of climate change. Even for fisheries that are doing well, like the lobster fishery, I hear concerns from the associations and the fishers.
I take into consideration all the work done by the committee. That work is important, as are the recommendations you make. I want to tell you that the work you did on foreign ownership and protecting the master owner model is really important to me. I also hear on the west coast about the importance of restoring a master owner model, and on the east coast about the importance of giving that model more teeth.
The committee's work is thorough and is accompanied by important recommendations. In the work I will be continuing to do, I am really going to take those recommendations into account.
Thank you for being here, Minister. I am glad to see you and your colleagues.
I think climate change is a catch-all excuse. We heard about the owner-operator model earlier. I can tell you that it is not just shrimp that are becoming extinct; owner-operators are too.
The fisheries are in crisis. In the Bloc Québécois, we obviously speak for Quebec fishers. The plants are closing down, there is no openness to the idea of licence buy-backs, the quotas are insufficient, and the proportion allocated to offshore trawlers is of great concern since that is what contributed to the decline in the resources 30 years ago.
Do you and your colleague, the , think that creating a crisis unit is an option to be considered in order to quickly remedy the foreign workers situation and apply measures to prevent bankruptcies? There are boats for sale but no one will buy them if there is no fishery.
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—and this year it is different. I come from the Gaspé and this is the first year there has been no ice, and it is because of climate change.
As you said, yes, species are endangered. That is the case for capelin, smelt, mackerel, herring and shrimp, and there will be others. The gulf is in a unique situation. We have seen the effects of climate change in Newfoundland and Labrador and in Nova Scotia, where the temperature has risen by 1.7°C or 1.9°C. These changes will mean that the gulf is going to continue to warm.
So I think the important thing is to stay in touch with the people in the fishing industry and find different ways of fishing. Some species are going to disappear and others will reappear, and we will have to know how to manage this. We are in a transition period at present. I think the important thing is to stay in touch with the sector and continue to work together.
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Thank you for your answer.
I agree with you on some issues. Climate change is not something new this year. We have been talking about it for some years, since 2015, according to Mr. Hardie. I am sure that we have been talking about it around this table since at least then, and that it has been much longer than that, in fact.
In reality, the department must be one of the first to have read about the repercussions of climate change we are seeing today. As a result, the word "predictability" is a fundamental, strategic word. It has to be at the forefront of what each of your employees in the department does. We are focused on it now, and we have the feeling that predictability does not seem to have been a factor in your department. We have seen this repeatedly on the part of the witnesses we have heard. I do not hold that against you, because you have not been in this department for very long.
However, based on the facts, I would reiterate that we are in a crisis. First, we have plants closing down. Workers are not coming in as planned. We have confirmation that in Quebec, the workers had been recognized and identified and were ready to come and work. We have to get down to this quickly, before more plants close. If that happens, it means people out of work who will not even be eligible for employment insurance. It will be over for some of them in a week.
I think we are in a crisis. The industry is calling for a crisis unit that you would be part of, along with the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, owners-operators and plants. You could work together on how to respond to the crisis. I would like to have an answer, please.
Welcome to the minister and, of course, to the department officials who are here today.
First of all, I want to acknowledge and thank you for bringing up the letter that I had sent to you relating to the questions that MP Arnold was asking, urging you to provide a detailed response to BCWF's urgent request to treat the problem of invasive species in British Columbia with the seriousness it deserves. I'm looking back at letters that they had sent around. I see November, December and February, and then of course my letter followed in March.
I'm not going to dig into it any more, because I have other things I want to ask, but I just want to ask this: Will you be providing a very clear response and plan forward to treat this problem that B.C. is now experiencing as a result of a lack of funding and a lack of attention that needed to be paid to it?
Through an Order Paper question that was dated and received on November 2, I can let you know that there have been 52 times when the main operating companies Mowi, Grieg and Cermaq have all been consulted to date. The reason I'm asking is that I'm curious to know how many more times they have been consulted since November 2.
Thank you, Ms. Gibbons.
In a conversation I had yesterday with the Namgis chief, Chief Ho'miskanis—his English name is Chief Don Svanvik—he discussed with me a meeting that he recently had with the DFO lead of Pacific aquaculture transition, Andrea Cyr, where he, along with other Broughton Archipelago first nation chiefs, was told that the plan forward is a renewal of two-year to six-year licences prior to a transition plan even being tabled.
Minister, could you please clarify if this is accurate information?
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Yes, I am going to answer the question in French.
I am very proud to be able to talk about a species. We should not say it is a new species, because it is a species that was exploited in the past. Work is being done on this invasive species, which is what seals are. Meetings have been held on the east coast and a lot of work is also being done with the indigenous communities, the Innu and Inuit, who are in full agreement about exploiting this resource in a responsible way and, as I said, being able to utilize the product to its full capacity, since 98% of the product is usable. That will also improve economic development for women and indigenous communities. In addition, work has been done and meetings have been held with ambassadors, particularly the Japanese ambassador, and that work is ongoing. I think it is important to be able to talk openly about it. We need not hide, we need not refrain from telling it like it is. Some countries are open to the possibility of working together.
At present, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, seals are like a fleet of evil, lawless fishing vessels that come to feed in the same pantry as we do. The objective is not to eliminate seals, it is to make them a new resource that will be profitable to the economy outside our urban centres.
Minister, this is about fishers in the pelagic fishery for mackerel, herring, shrimp, redfish and crab, and the processing plants. Things are going well for lobster, but it will be a problem if it gets eaten by seals.
In your budget, there are millions of dollars that come in part from our fishers' income taxes. Is there money to support the fisheries that are affected by all of the circumstances we see today, including the lack of predictability at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans? Everyone here has observed this. Is there a budget to remedy or support it, to improve the fate of all the fishers who are dying right now? It is very serious.
You seem to be saying that since I was not born in the Gaspé, I do not understand the ocean. Well, my father and my grandfather fished for 37 years. Don't worry; I can tell the difference between shrimp and crab.
Is there something in your budget to help these people? People are constantly shouting at me and both my telephones ring all the time.
Minister, one of the recent times the department officials were here, I was asking about the British Columbia government, which is moving forward with some really strong actions around watershed protection. Now more than ever we need leadership at all levels of government to protect our watersheds, given the lower than ever snow and rain and worsening droughts. They're essential as we move forward with climate action, and I see you nodding and agreeing with that.
The NDP government in British Columbia is seeking support from the federal government to match the funds for a watershed security fund. A letter went out to your colleagues the , the and the , and I noticed that you're not included on it, but I will certainly forward it your way so that you are aware of it.
I was hoping to get your response on the importance of us having the leadership at all levels of government working together to protect our watersheds.
I'll be splitting my time with my colleague Mr. Perkins. We have the clock going, so we're going to keep it nice and organized.
My first question is for Ms. Gibbons.
Ms. Gibbons, is the logbook data that I referenced in the last round tabulated and analyzed for northern cod for the years 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023? It wasn't as of the end of November or mid-December.
It's been three months since I received an answer to my Order Paper question, which told me that the four years of data hadn't been touched. However, the same Order Paper question also told me that the data would be analyzed and ready to be incorporated into the stock assessment in April. That's no small feat. Is it done?
Obviously, the Coast Guard provides a very valuable service, not only to the east coast fishery but to the population in general, with the timely rebuilding of the fleet.
Ms. Gibbons—or whomever you want to direct the questions to—I have a series of questions, and you may have to get back to the committee on these.
Earlier, when the minister was here, we had a series of questions on small craft harbours. I would like you to provide to the committee the total budgetary expenditure of small craft harbours beginning in fiscal year 2016, up until fiscal year 2023, and how it compares with the eight years prior to fiscal year 2016.
If you can, please also do that, Ms. Gibbons, in the area of the department's capacity to provide adequate protections. The department provides protection personnel, and I want to see a comparison, because a lot of questions were raised about capacity. They did not want to see a negative impact from any cost reductions. I want to look at the same period for the protection personnel part of the department and how it compares to the previous time frame.
Ms. Gibbons, I have informed the Minister frankly of my concerns, and I speak for the fishers of Quebec.
The fishery in Quebec, apart from the lobster fishery at the moment, is in the process of extinction. I know you have not been involved for very long and I also understand that the idea of predictability has been around for a good ten or 15 years. How do you want to remedy the situation? It has to be remedied, and I hope you want to do it.
I wanted to do a study on small craft harbours. We are chatting right now, but we will soon not be needing any harbours because there will be no more boats. We have got to that point. Do you have an idea of what budget might be allocated for support, licence buy-backs, or crisis units to bring workers in quickly?
Does the Minister talk to the
? I ask that question because that minister says it is because of Mexico and the Minister says it is because of Quebec. I think that somewhere in the middle, somebody has to deal with this.
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I would like to ask this other question: in your budgets, are you going to release a certain amount of money in order to be able to offer financial support to the fishers who are affected right now, through licence buy-backs or other measures?
All these families are heading for the wall. While I do not want to engage in populism as my neighbours do, there are children, young people, huge numbers of families who will be affected by this, which means the economy of the Gaspé Peninsula is mortgaged to the hilt.
Since we are talking about budgets today, I want to ask you whether any support is provided in your budgets to remedy the situation in the short term, that is, before the studies and consultations, which take a huge amount of time, are finished. We have time to close all the plants and see all the boats beached if something is not done quickly. Do you understand?
My first question is for Ms. Gibbons.
As you know, we conducted a study recently with the Great Lakes Fishery Commission, and I wanted to do a follow up on that. The committee recently conducted a study looking at the allocation of resources to the Great Lakes Fishery Commission. As you know, the commission has been paralyzed, for lack of a better word, around uncertainty of funding.
I know that the funding has been allocated, but my question is about one of the recommendations that came forward as a result of this study, which is that the portfolio management responsibilities and machinery of government functions for the Great Lakes Fishery Commission be transferred from DFO to Global Affairs Canada. As far as I know, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission has not received a clear response on this. I don't think we've received a clear response as a committee as to the status of this transfer.
Can you please provide an update?
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Okay. Well, somebody has to be able to make it happen. Perhaps the minister can apply the pressure necessary to the to see this move in the right direction.
Ms. Gibbons, perhaps you could provide some clarity. In my questions to the minister—and we all wish as MPs that we had more time with the minister to be able to fully understand—one thing I was confused by was the consultation process happening with the open-net pen fish farms out of the water, and what that looks like in terms of the consultation process.
My understanding of the dates, I think, is different from the minister's, so perhaps you can provide some clarity. My understanding was that March 8 was the deadline for consultations around two-year to six-year licence extensions, that March 15 was the end of consultations for phase four of the transition planning process in total, and that the current licence will expire for all....
Can you clarify, please? Provide some clarification on these dates and how far we are with the consultation process. I didn't get that clarity.
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Mr. Chair, there are really two separate consultation processes. Obviously, they're linked, because they're dealing with salmon farms.
The transition plan is about the future direction for the industry writ large, for the sector and what we do. The government's commitment was around transitioning away from open-net pen farms.
The licence renewals are the specific permits that allow particular activities to happen at particular sites. From a legal regulatory perspective, we need to treat those as distinct activities and to consult on them. That is why we have two different consultation exercises going on, and two different dates.
The phase four consultations refer to the transition plan consultations. The licence renewal consultations are distinct. Obviously, we're talking to the same people, but we're talking about the licence renewals separately from the transition plan.
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I think I may be the last person speaking to this, by the looks of it.
It was mentioned that the minister doesn't need anyone to hold her water. You bet your bottom dollar she doesn't. She'll come to speak to the main estimates.
To MP Hardie's point, whether it's on the 12th or somewhere around that time frame, I think we all believe it's important for the minister to come to speak to that. She came here today for an hour. The main estimates are a key point of government, of the ministry and of the department in terms of funding, what we do and do well.
I would like to go back, if I can, to Mr. Arnold. He touched upon the motion and passing the motion with—I don't want to put words in his mouth—some flexibility. Would that be fair to say? If it's not the 12th, let's say sometime in April. Is that doable?
I want to make sure that we are concrete on what our asks are so we can plan accordingly. As MP Barron said, we're going to have a subcommittee meeting to give, I think, greater direction to where we go.
Maybe we could go through you, Mr. Chair, to Mr. Arnold in terms of what I think I heard. I want to make sure that's accurate.
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Maybe I can start, and then ask Doug to complement.
As a general principle, Maine's regime requires a licence to posses elvers all along the supply chain. It's that stem-to-stern kind of approach that ensures that there's an ability to control it in a very granular way.
Maine has some particular features that are really detailed. I visited Maine with and Doug a couple of weeks ago. Every transaction has to be recorded as a debit or a credit as elvers pass from one person in the supply chain to another. They require that to happen, so there is that record, but there is also a record of the payment, and the payment has to be by cheque. That is an additional requirement that they have, to really ensure there's evidence. There's no cash allowed in elver sales in Maine.
Another thing they did to try to tighten the controls was to require that sales be at an establishment, a place of business that is registered. You cannot sell elver out of the back of a truck or at a wharf—it's not a wharf; it's rivers. Nonetheless, you can't do it on a river bank. Again, that is a very tight requirement.
Also, when the elvers are leaving the state of Maine, there is an export event that takes place, and that is a regulated, overseen activity. You have to apply for a permit to export elvers, and there will be an event for the export that is very tightly controlled.
There are a number of things along the supply chain, and they have, of course, evolved with time.
I want to look to today. With the season closed, for those watching back home or across Canada, or across the street for that matter, I want to get a sense of the enforcement, the actual numbers. That's number one, if we can highlight what's happened in the last two weeks.
Also.... I don't know if this is appropriate or not—you can tell me whether it is or it isn't—but many of the comments we've had around this table with different stakeholders government-wise, for example CBSA, really highlighted that we need to tighten our game in terms of the supply chain. Obviously, that's why we're looking for new regulations, but I want to get a sense of whether we are doing any work focusing on the transport of elvers, for example, to airports and ports themselves.
Is there any activity happening that you can share, either in part or in whole, to give us some indication of what's happening now? It is being transported, and I know that's not simply a DFO prerogative, but I wonder if you could provide any details on that.
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Thank you for the question.
Broadly speaking, we've dedicated more resources again this year to the elver fishery, including bringing in a number of fishery officers from other regions across Canada. Over the last two weeks, we have arrested at total of 34 individuals, as well as seizing a number of different assets and countless pieces of fishing gear, as the deputy minister has alluded to.
We don't just work riverside. Obviously, we want to make sure our frontline efforts are the priority, but we do work at major ports of exit and at airports, including an operation last night at one of the key airports. That work will continue to augment the work that's on the ground riverside.
Ms. Gibbons, I would like to make one last attempt and convey all the hope felt by fishers. When I talk about fishers, I am referring to master owners, deckhands, workers in the processing plants and plant owners. I want to convey all the hope those people are placing on collaboration between the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the Department of Citizenship and Immigration to apply pressure in order for the foreign workers to arrive in time.
In the present circumstances, with the shrimp fishery experiencing a drastic decline in stocks that jeopardizes the very existence of some economies in the Quebec fishery sector, I am trying again. Does an emergency unit seem to you to be an option that could quickly resolve the issue of foreign workers? That is the most immediately urgent thing at this time. Second, could that emergency unit, that crisis unit, quickly look into putting support in place?
Of course, some of those people have a little cushion, some savings, but some of them are really up against it. The boats will not get sold and a lot of people are going to go bankrupt. Can this be avoided? Can there also be assurance that the know-how will still be available when fishing resumes, when solutions are found for these fishers? This is all fundamental. In these circumstances, could a crisis unit be put in place to deal with the various pressing problems in the Quebec fisheries, but also in the Maritimes, in the short and medium terms?
Thank you again, Ms. Gibbons, for being here.
My question is around the First Nations Fisheries Council. As I'm sure you're aware, the first nations caucus is, in effect, a key participant in the Pacific Salmon Treaty process. As you know, the first nations caucus is vital to Canadians and indigenous people participating in this process. They are a key part of this process.
Unfortunately, something I brought to the 's attention in 2023 was that the First Nations Fisheries Council was reaching out with concerns that, despite the immense role they take on in this process, the funding they receive is minimal. They don't have the funding to truly participate and make sure they are speaking with members of the first nations to bring forward the information and have the meetings required for them to ensure that they're all on the same page in order to participate fully in the process.
I did write a letter to the minister a year ago, asking for this funding to be enhanced. The First Nations Fisheries Council is still reaching out with concerns around the funding being allocated.
I'm wondering if you could speak to this and share the steps forward to ensure that this participation can be done in a fulsome manner.