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The Hon. Jane  Cordy, B.Ed. An accomplished educator, Senator Jane Cordy was appointed to the Senate on June 9, 2000, by the Rt. Honourable Jean Chrétien. She represents the province of Nova Scotia.

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Allow fish harvesters to qualify for EI based on 2008 earnings and extend EI fishing benefits by five weeks says report by Senate Fisheries and Oceans Committee

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Posted on 09 June 2009

Ottawa (June 09, 2009) – Immediate changes to the Employment Insurance program must be implemented to address the problems created by low lobster prices says a report by the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans, entitled Crisis in the Lobster Fishery.

As prices paid to fishermen at the wharf have dropped to levels not seen in two decades, the committee recommends fish harvesters be allowed to qualify for EI based on 2008 earnings and EI fishing benefits be extended by five weeks. EI fishing benefits are paid to self-employed fishermen, and eligibility for benefits is based on earnings rather than on hours worked. 

“This would help fishermen make it to the next fishing season,” says Senator Bill Rompkey, Chair of the committee. “More assistance is needed to ease the current situation in coastal communities where non-fishing job opportunities are scarce in the best of times, let alone during a recession.”

The committee urges the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans to immediately enter into formal discussions with Atlantic fish harvester organizations and the provincial governments to develop a short-term assistance plan for the fishery.

“Initiatives such as federal investments in marketing, promotion and eco-labelling, while welcome and needed, are overshadowed by the more pressing problem of fishermen getting significantly less for their catches,” says Senator Ethel Cochrane, Deputy Chair of the committee.

The report calls for a comprehensive plan for the lobster fishery, including voluntary fleet rationalization to reduce fishing capacity where needed.  The federal government should also contribute to the costs of removing lobster licences from the fishery.

Recognizing the severe difficulties facing the Atlantic lobster fishery, the committee convened a panel to discuss the matter on May 26, 2009. According to fishery organization representatives who presented, approximately 10,000 licensed owner-operators and 15,000 deck hands who fish on boats less than 45 feet in length are directly affected by the downturn in lobster markets. Additionally, twenty-five thousand other workers are employed on shore and in processing plants throughout the four Atlantic provinces and Quebec.

To read the full report and list of recommendations, please visit the committee website: www.senate-senat.ca/fopo-e.asp

 

For more information, please contact:

Ceri Au
Communications Officer
613-944-9145
1-800-267-7362
auc@sen.parl.gc.ca

Danielle Labonté
Committee Clerk
613.949.4379
1-800-267-7362
labond@sen.parl.gc.ca


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