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As tensions rose during N S fisheries dispute, province balked at paying for extra RCMP

Posted: May 25, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: May 25 RCMP officers stand on the wharf in Saulnierville, N.S., in front of supporters of a Mi kmaw fishery on Sept. 20, 2020.(Jeorge Sadi/CBC) A top RCMP officer requested help to pay for extra policing costs during last fall s fisheries dispute in southwest Nova Scotia, but the province s justice minister resisted for two weeks and only agreed after two lobster pounds holding Mi kmaw catch were vandalized, with one later burned to the ground. The details of the financial dispute between the province and Mounties are contained in records, newly released to CBC under provincial freedom-of-information laws, that shed light on the overtime and expenses related to pulling in officers from the rest of Atlantic Canada to help police the area.

N S Mi kmaq fisher says his movements are being watched and his traps seized by DFO

  ST. PETER S, N.S. A Mi kmaq fisher in Cape Breton is the latest Indigenous fisher to suggest Ottawa appears intent on removing any First Nation s lobster traps that aren t approved by the federal Fisheries Department. Craig Doucette, a lobster fisher from Potlotek First Nation, said Wednesday he estimates officers with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans have seized about 40 of his lobster traps in St. Peter s Bay since May 10. Doucette said he feels his actions are being monitored because enforcement officers quickly seize his traps soon after he sets them. As it stands, right now, they kind of watch me, he said in an interview.

We have no other choice : N S Mi kmaq chief to request UN peacekeepers ahead of lobster fishery

Lobster stock healthy, not overfished in Canada s richest fishing ground

Posted: May 01, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: May 1 A Nova Scotia lobster boat leaves the wharf loaded down with traps.(CBC) The lobster population in Canada s most important harvesting area is healthy and not overfished, according to a new scientific assessment released by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The 20,000-square-kilometre fishing ground off southwestern Nova Scotia and into the Bay of Fundy, known as Lobster Fishing Area 34, accounts for 20 per cent of all lobster landed in Canada and 10 per cent of North American landings. The stock is considered to be in the healthy zone. Furthermore, as the relative fishing mortality is below the removal indicator in all four survey indices, overfishing is not occurring, the report concluded.

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