Elver fishery shutdown a 'destruction of hope,' says Wolastoqey fisheries director - Action News
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Indigenous

Elver fishery shutdown a 'destruction of hope,' says Wolastoqey fisheries director

Patrick Polchies,fisheries director for Bilijk, says the shutdown of the elver fisherythis past weekend in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is a "destruction of hope for so many people."

Mi'kmaw elder worried about eel population applauds the shutdown

Elver eels in a white cooler.
Brent Sacobie was fishing for baby eels for the first time this year and is disappointed Fisheries and Oceans Canada suspended the elver fishery for 45 days starting April 15. (submitted by Brent Sacobie)

One Wolastoqey man says he spent thousands of dollars on gear to fish for elvers (baby eels) this year and worries he won't be able to recoup that money after the federal government shut down the elver fisherythis past weekend.

Fisheries andOceans Canada (DFO) shut down the elver fishery in New Brunswick and Nova Scotiaon April 15 for 45 daysbecause of conservation and safety concerns, after reports of violence andoverfishing by unauthorized harvesters.

This year was Brent Sacobie's first time trying to cash in on the lucrative industry,with prices reaching $5,000 a kilogram in 2022.

"I have four kids and I have a lot of mouths to feed," said Sacobie, who is from Bilijk, Kingsclear First Nation, 13 kilometres west of Fredericton.

An Indigenous man sits with a red hat.
Brent Sacobie was fishing for elvers under his community's quota. (Brent Sacobie/Facebook)

He said he heard stories from friends about how great the fishery was so he invested moneyin dip nets, waders, coolers and gas to travel out to the estuaries.

Sacobiecaught one-third of his allotted 1.5 kilogram quota before the shutdown.

Sacobie said on the rivers he fished he didn't see any violence and he wants to see Indigenous leadership, the commercial industry and the government come together to reopen the fishery.

"We all need financial stability in our lives and we all need that security," said Sacobie.

The elver fishery has grown in value in recent years. The elversor baby eels aresold to markets in China and Japan where they are raised to adulthood for food. The elver season typically runs from mid-March until June.

Patrick Polchies,fisheries director for Bilijk, said 68 people were registered to harvest elvers for his community.

He called the shutdown a "destruction of hope for so many people."

The Wolastoqey Nation was allotted 750 kilograms of quota to divide among itssix communities, said Polchies.

Polchies said his community's 103 kilogram piece of that quota isa stark contrast to the more than 1,000 kilogram quotaallotted to one commercial licence. There are nine commercial licences in Atlantic Canada.

In 2012, the American Eel was assessedas threatened by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, which is why Mi'kmawElder Gordon LaBillois applauds theshutdown.

An Indigenous man stands at a podium.
Mi'kmaw Elder Gordon LaBillois applauds the elver fishery shutting down for 45 days. (Nelson Cloud )

"If they have ... the data to support what they're doing then I think they're doing the right thing," said LaBillois, from Ugpi'ganjig, Eel River Bar First Nation, 250 kilometres north of Moncton.

He saidhe's not an expert butso much can affect the eelpopulation like climate change and development,he'd rather see the elver fishery slow down so the population can be studied.

He said he does feel for any moderate livelihood harvester affectedand saida compromise would be to prioritize Indigenous interests on the eels for now.