Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Dispute over fishery deal not resolved after premier meets with PM

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2014 05:19 PM

    OTTAWA — Newfoundland and Labrador's premier is still at odds with the prime minister over a fishery fund to compensate for Canada's free trade deal with Europe.

    Paul Davis met with Stephen Harper in Ottawa on Friday to discuss a multimillion-dollar fund at the heart of the escalating dispute.

    The premier's position is that federal negotiators agreed to a joint $400-million fund, of which Ottawa would pay $280 million dollars.

    He maintains the cash was in exchange for the province giving up minimum processing rules under the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement that helped protect fish plant jobs.

    In a statement after the meeting, the Prime Minister's Office said an unspecified amount is available for related losses.

    "The Minimum Processing Requirements fund was always intended to compensate hard-working Newfoundlanders and Labradorians for demonstrable losses as a result of the removal of these requirements," the statement said.

    "It was never intended to be a blank cheque."

    Davis has threatened to reconsider his province's support for CETA if the dispute cannot be worked out.

    At issue is a fishery transition fund touted as an unprecedented injection for a struggling industry when it was announced in October 2013 by then-premier Kathy Dunderdale. At the time, she said $280 million would come from Ottawa to pay for marketing, research and to support displaced workers. The province was to cover the rest.

    While provincial Liberal Opposition critics blasted it as a sellout, Dunderdale talked up access to lucrative European markets and how the $400-million fund would help make up for any lost jobs.

    CETA is popular with groups in the province, such as the Association of Seafood Producers that wants punishing tariffs removed.

    But conspicuously absent from the news conference announcing the deal last fall were any federal ministers to share in the joint credit.

    Davis has accused Ottawa of belatedly trying to put a cash value on those minimum processing requirements and limit its funding commitment to the province.

    Davis has not pinned a dollar value on the rules meant to guarantee that a certain amount of seafood is processed in often rural communities before it's exported. He has talked instead about the cultural worth of the requirements and how dropping them was a major policy shift for his governing Progressive Conservatives.

    He stressed on one hand that lifting minimum processing obstacles for the European Union won't hurt the provincial sector and would offer unfettered access to valuable new markets.

    On the other hand, Davis said Ottawa's $280-million commitment was a key prerequisite for giving up such protections.

    Documents tabled in the legislature include an email from Bill Hawkins, then the chief of staff to federal International Trade Minister Ed Fast, dated a week before Dunderdale announced the fishery fund last year.

    In it, he refers to a "transitional program of up to $400 million" and said the federal government looked forward to fleshing out details.

    The CETA deal with the 28-member European Union was signed earlier this year, but it could be another two years before it's fully implemented as details and legal text are finalized.

    Any refusal by Newfoundland and Labrador to lift minimum processing rules could trigger complaints under the pact which, if upheld, could result in penalties against Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science

    Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science
    The federal government is spending an extra $30.5 million on programs to shore up Canada's readiness to deal with Ebola in this country, Health Minister Rona Ambrose said Monday.

    Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science

    B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative

    B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is planning to launch an undercover assault on the alternative taxi service known as Uber.

    B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative

    Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive

    Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The night began with a promise not to drink and drive and ended with an impaired driver crashing his pickup and killing two passengers.

    Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive

    Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season

    Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season
    KELOWNA, B.C. — When Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier didn't make Canada's team for the Sochi Olympics, the ice dancers put themselves on autopilot.

    Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season

    Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes

    Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes
    TORONTO — A Canadian hospital is launching a court challenge with the ultimate goal of invalidating patents on human genes, saying such protection can adversely affect the health of patients and boost the country's health-care costs.

    Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes

    Ontario government is holding up infrastructure plan funding: Oliver

    Ontario government is holding up infrastructure plan funding: Oliver
    TORONTO — Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the Ontario government is causing delays in the federal government's plan to devote nearly $11 billion to infrastructure investments in the province over the coming years.

    Ontario government is holding up infrastructure plan funding: Oliver