Dear
[ supporter ]
Recreational
fisheries - it's time to put up or shut up?
In
this Update, arguably our most important to date, we ask for your
feedback on some crucial directions option4 is considering taking.
Should
option4 mount a legal challenge based on human rights issues?
Should
option4 employ a fisheries scientist to act in a watchdog role until
the rights issue is resolved?
Should
option4 do nothing?
Please
take the time to read thoroughly and respond now using
the form at the end of this email !
The
decisions we make now may be the most important for us in the whole
process of defining the public right in our fisheries.
Are
we winning or simply fiddling while Rome burns?
option4's
fight for the continued individual rights of all New Zealander's
to fish for food and recreation, and the priority nature of those
rights over commercial fishing has now been waged for 14 months
on your behalf.
It is now obvious that a stalemate is imminent. The essence of
the debate is, do we or don't we have a priority over commercial
fishers.
The Government, through the Ministry of Fisheries, continues to
hold the view that neither commercial nor recreational fishers have
priority over one another. option4 finds this position untenable
because the public were not consulted about, nor did they agree
to, constraining all future generations of New Zealanders to the
leftovers from the implementation of the Quota Management System
(QMS) in 1986.
If sufficient public support is forthcoming option4 will focus on
the following two areas in an endeavour to break the stalemate:
Legal
Human rights issues
While the Government position focuses
on defining "recreational fishing" option4 believes that
if the people harvesting fish or shellfish do so primarily or substantively
for food, then the issue is not about recreational fishing. It is
about the public's right to gather seafood from a public resource
for subsistence and sustenance purposes, to share that food with
family and friends and, whether or not that right has priority over
commercial use of that same resource.
It is also about the existence of well-documented prior access to
those resources forming the foundation of that right and the customary
nature of prior-access where that forms a part of the culture and
tradition of the people. It is about the right to food, the right
to access one's food and to harvest food for subsistence and sustenance
purposes. In a nutshell it is a human rights issue.
It is a core responsibility of Government not to interfere with
such rights or enact legislation that allows others to interfere
with those rights. Where the Government has eroded these rights,
it is also a core role of the Government to undo that injustice.
option4 also considers the Government has inadequately addressed
the social, economic and cultural well being of all New Zealanders
within it's current position. One recent survey indicates 1.3 million
New Zealanders go fishing (a total of 14 million trips per annum).
By the time we share some of our harvest with our friends and families
most of the population enjoy the benefits of us going fishing.
Human rights, including the preservation of customs and traditions,
are not based on race, religion, property or any other segregation
of society.
In order to resolve the above issues option4 intends to appoint
a constitutional legal advisor to test the validity or otherwise
of the Government's position before any further progress can be
made. A judicial review may be necessary. This will necessitate
a significant fundraising effort on the part of option4.
Scientific
Recreational fishing representatives have often reported that their
input into fishery management decisions is dismissed as anecdotal
by the Ministry of Fisheries. They have also reported that un-validated
input from the fishing industry is more likely accepted as credible
by the Ministry. This can bias management decisions in favour of
the fishing industry.
To counter this situation and to raise the quality of recreational
input into fisheries management decisions option4 is considering
employing a fisheries scientist. The scientist will monitor and
report back on fisheries research, the Total Allowable Commercial
Catch (TACC) setting process, regulatory changes and the proposed
introduction into the Quota Management System of 50 new species.
The scientist would also monitor and have input into any Ministry
of Fisheries proposals or Fisheries Plans to help prevent further
erosion of the public's access to fish for food or recreation until
the issue of the public right is resolved. This will also require
a significant fundraising effort.
Background
Just to refresh our supporters, here is a summary of events to date
The issue of defining public fishing rights started when the Government
invited the public to tell them how they wanted their fishery managed.
That is the question 'Soundings" allegedly set out to find
the answer to. The public certainly gave them an answer, but not
the one they wanted to hear! The public wanted the four principles
of option4 enshrined in legislation. The first option4 principle
is that the public harvest should have priority over commercial
fishing.
Despite the fact that option4 delivered over 61,000 submissions
(which accounted for a staggering 98.5% of all submissions received
in response to the consultation process), despite the fact that
the New Zealand Big Game Fishing Council and New Zealand Recreational
Fishing Council both fully support the four principles of option4,
it appears the Minister considers there is not sufficient consensus
within the recreational sector for him to move forward with what
he calls "Recreational Fishing Reforms". option4 simply
cannot believe that such a clear and concise outcome can be construed
as a lack of consensus.
So,
what is the real issue ?
In 1986, when transferable Property Rights were given to the commercial
sector in perpetuity, no provision was made in law to allow for,
or recognise, the future needs of, and the pre-existing rights of
the New Zealand peoples to harvest from the sea.
Maori recognised this oversight, and have successfully claimed for
both a commercial and traditional right. This cost the Government
considerable compensation because of its failure to recognise the
Maori rights, which were taken to create the commercial Quota Management
System.
The inevitable erosion of your individual right to harvest fish
for food or recreation by the creation of commercial fishing quota
has yet to be resolved. It appears obvious that the "plan"
was to get you (the public) to accept a proportional system and
exchange your individual fishing right for a collective public quota.
If successful this would have allowed the Government to avoid compensation
issues as the population, and public harvest, increased. It would
also have effectively made the public minor shareholders in the
commercial fishery and absolved Government from having to allocate
the resource between the sectors. This is just one of the nightmares
the Ministry and Government are keen to pass onto the public regarding
the shortcomings of the Quota Management System to escape it's detrimental
effects on the publics fishing and harvesting rights. If a proportional
share wasn't accepted, the threat made in "Soundings"
was that the public's fishing rights would be allowed to diminish
under the status quo.
It
is now time to have your say !!!!!!!
The Government, through the Ministry of Fisheries, holds the view
that neither commercial nor recreational have priority over each
other. option4 wants to mount a legal challenge to the government's
position but will only do so if your support warrants that option4
expends the vast resources required to make it happen. option4 also
considers it critical to employ a scientist to perform a watchdog
role over challenges to our existing rights that may come from fisheries
management decisions taken before the judicial review provides an
answer.
Regards
The Team at
option4
[ footing ]
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