Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal Court Rules Farmed Salmon Must Be Tested For Deadly Virus In B.C.

The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2019 08:45 PM
  • Federal Court Rules Farmed Salmon Must Be Tested For Deadly Virus In B.C.

VANCOUVER — The Federal Court has struck down a Fisheries and Oceans Canada policy regarding a lethal virus that has the potential to infect wild chinook salmon in British Columbia waters.


Piscine orthoreovirus, or PRV, is highly contagious and often found in fish farms off the B.C. coast, many of which are positioned along wild salmon migration routes.


In her ruling issued Monday, Justice Cecily Strickland says the federal policy unlawfully allows young farmed Atlantic salmon to be transferred into open net pens without testing for the virus.


She has given the department four months to begin testing for the disease.


PRV causes fatal heart and skeletal muscle inflammation in Atlantic salmon but a 2018 study led by a Fisheries and Oceans Canada scientist found it is linked to an equally deadly type of anemia in at least one species of wild B.C. salmon.


Marine biologist Alexandra Morton is celebrating the victory after working with the Namgis First Nation and Ecojustice to convince the Fisheries Department to test farmed salmon before they are put in open net pens.


She says the problem is that PRV screening could dramatically reduce profits in the aquaculture industry.


"If the minister of fisheries follows the law of Canada and screens these fish and does not allow the infected ones to go into the water, I don't think the fish farm industry has enough fish to keep farming in these waters, and I think that is the crux of the problem," Morton says.


Morton and the Namgis filed a lawsuit last year against the policy.


Strickland's judgement, released Monday, says the federal policy of not testing for the virus "perpetuates a state of wilful blindness on the part of the minister with respect to the extend of PRV infection in hatcheries and fish farms."


An emailed statement from Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Jonathan Wilkinson says the court ruling is being reviewed.


"Our government understands that a strong, science-based approach to regulating the aquaculture industry is essential and that is why we have and will continue to conduct extensive research which informs our policies and regulations," Wilkinson says in the statement.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberals Go Cold On Talk About Right To Housing Law, Housing Groups Say

OTTAWA — The federal Liberals aren't living up to a promise to legislate a right to housing, a group of housing and homelessness advocates say, and that's threatening the objectives of their own $40-billion housing strategy.

Liberals Go Cold On Talk About Right To Housing Law, Housing Groups Say

Man Killed Calgary Woman, Daughter Because Girlfriend Broke Up With Him: Crown

Man Killed Calgary Woman, Daughter Because Girlfriend Broke Up With Him: Crown
CALGARY — A man accused in a double murder killed a woman who was trying to protect a close friend and then silenced the woman's five-year-old daughter who was a witness, a Crown prosecutor suggested Monday.

Man Killed Calgary Woman, Daughter Because Girlfriend Broke Up With Him: Crown

'It's Bad:' Oshawa, Ont., Digests 'Devastating' GM Plant Closure

'It's Bad:' Oshawa, Ont., Digests 'Devastating' GM Plant Closure
OSHAWA, Ont. — Shell-shocked GM workers streamed into the rain and chill wind after their union sent them home on Monday amid word that their plant would be closing by the end of 2019, dealing a blow to a city and region once synonymous with the automaker.

'It's Bad:' Oshawa, Ont., Digests 'Devastating' GM Plant Closure

Politicians Promise Help For GM Workers; Stress That Saving Plant Hopeless

Politicians Promise Help For GM Workers; Stress That Saving Plant Hopeless
Provincial and federal leaders alike conceded the futility Monday of trying to persuade General Motors to keep its Oshawa, Ont., automotive plant running beyond 2019, and instead focused on ways to ease the pain of more than 2,500 workers who stand to lose their jobs.

Politicians Promise Help For GM Workers; Stress That Saving Plant Hopeless

GM In For 'One Hell Of A Fight' Over Planned Oshawa Plant Closure: Union

GM In For 'One Hell Of A Fight' Over Planned Oshawa Plant Closure: Union
TORONTO — The union representing workers at the General Motors assembly plant in Oshawa, Ont., is promising "one hell of a fight" after the automaker announced it would close the location along with four other facilities in the U.S. as part of a global reorganization.

GM In For 'One Hell Of A Fight' Over Planned Oshawa Plant Closure: Union

O'Leary Holds Campaign-Style Event With Scheer, Says It's Time To 'Fire And Hire'

  OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's campaign for prime minister next year will get some star power from businessman Kevin O'Leary, the two said in Toronto Monday.

O'Leary Holds Campaign-Style Event With Scheer, Says It's Time To 'Fire And Hire'