Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Heiltsuk Nation In Talks With Government About Contentious Fishery

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2015 11:40 AM

    BELLA BELLA, B.C. — B.C.'s Heiltsuk Nation says it is now in talks with federal officials about a disputed herring fishery in its central coast territory but has yet to see a resolution.

    The First Nation issued a news release that says its representatives met Monday in Heiltsuk territory with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans regional director general, Sue Farlinger.

    Farlinger's visit comes as Heiltsuk members occupied a federal field office on Denny Island by locking themselves inside and camping outside in objection to an expected gillnet fishery.

    Heiltsuk Nation says discussions with Farlinger will resume Tuesday, and members will meanwhile continue to occupy the office where protests began Sunday night.

    The First Nation says Farlinger has now offered to set aside areas for Heiltsuk food, social, and ceremonial fisheries, but the nation wants a guarantee that the fishery will be closed to commercial harvesters.

    Heiltsuk Nation says there's not enough herring for a commercial fishery, but the federal government maintains that the stock can support a modest harvest.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School
    VICTORIA — A crumbling, omnipresent red brick building has been a haunting presence for thousands of British Columbia aboriginal people who say they faced physical and sexual abuse at the site.

    Demolition Ceremony Set For 'Haunting' Vancouver Island Residential School

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother
    Ottawa police are continuing their search for two young boys who were the subject of an Amber Alert on Saturday night.

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'
    OTTAWA — The big-ticket military mission to fetch fugitive Luka Rocco Magnotta from Germany in 2012 was ordered by a senior Conservative cabinet minister who considered it a matter of "national interest," The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend
    HALIFAX — A man who went to rock shows with one of the young men alleged to have been planning a Valentine's Day shooting on a Halifax mall says his acquaintance never spoke of guns to him.

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba MP is calling for a boycott of "Fifty Shades of Grey," claiming the film supports humiliation, degradation and the emotional and physical abuse of women.

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze
    HALIFAX — A savage winter storm pounded Maritimes on Sunday, causing damage, delays and dangerous driving conditions on Sunday while people in parts of southern Ontario and Quebec were braving biting winds and frigid Arctic temperatures.

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze