Supreme Court of Canada nixes Nuuchahnulth fisheries decision review

CDNBear

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Supreme Court of Canada nixes Nuuchahnulth fisheries decision review

Category: NEWS
Created on Monday, 02 April 2012 12:14
Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 November -0001 00:00
Published Date

By Wawmeesh G. Hamilton - Alberni Valley News

The Supreme Court of Canada won’t review a landmark B.C. court ruling that recognizes members of five First Nations rights to make a living selling the fish they catch in their traditional territories.

The announcement was made on the court’s “Dismissed with Costs” judgements section of its website on Tuesday.

In May 2011, the three-member judges panel unanimously upheld the 2009 B.C. Supreme Court decision that recognized that the Nuu-chah-nulth “…have aboriginal rights to fish for any species of fish within their Fishing Territories ... and to sell that fish”, the judgment noted.

The courts did not extend the aboriginal right to the modern geoduck fishery, which it called “high tech”. “There can be no viable suggestion that the ancestors of the respondents could have participated in the commercial harvesting and trading of this particular marine resource at some time before contact…” the judgment showed.

The courts further decreed that the Nuu-chah-nulth and Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada have one year to negotiate and agreement that conforms to the decision.
 

The Old Medic

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That is one of the issues that an agreement would handle. The Court decision does not cover that, it only covers the issue that BC tried to stop, the selling of fish caught in their fishery area.