HORGAN: HALIBUT CLOSURE HURTS COASTAL COMMUNITIES

September 6, 2011

VICTORIA-Fisheries and Oceans Canada's decision to close the recreational halibut fishery on September 5th will impact tens of thousands of recreational anglers and hurt hundreds of local businesses, Juan de Fuca MLA John Horgan said today.

"This closure hurts residents of coastal communities who want to catch a fish or two, employees of the hundreds of small businesses who support and equip recreational anglers, and the hundreds of workers in the commercial halibut fishery whose jobs have disappeared as commercial quota holders continue to concentrate the catch onto fewer and fewer boats," said Horgan. "I strongly urge the federal government to look at the impact this decision will have on coastal communities and create a new halibut allocation formula that is fair to recreational, commercial and First Nations fishers."

Federal Fisheries Minister Keith Ashfield closed the recreational halibut fishery in BC at midnight on September 5th on the basis that BC's 100,000 recreational halibut anglers have caught 12% of the Total Allowable Catch (TAC) allocated to Canada in 2011 by the International Pacific Halibut Commission. Canada has allocated 88% of the TAC to 436 commercial quota holders. As of September 5, 40% of Canada's TAC of halibut remains unharvested.

"I'm quite certain that recreational anglers and the businesses that support them would endorse any closure aimed at onserving halibut stocks, but sadly this closure is designed to support the further privatization of Canada's fisheries resources," said Horgan. "This closure will make September a lot rougher for those who traditionally spend their time on the Strait of Juan de Fuca."

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For more info, contact:

John Horgan, MLA
250 391 2801