Pre-confederation Similar statutes existed even before Confederation in some pre-Confederation jurisdictions. Since confederation, the
British North America Act established all coastal and inland fisheries as being under the jurisdiction of the federal level of government. The
Province of Canada had the
An Act to amend Chapter 62 of the Consolidated Statutes of Canada, and to provide for the better regulation of Fishing and protection of Fisheries.
Initial Act The Act, then known as
An Act for the regulation of Fishing and the protection of Fisheries was passed into law on May 22, 1868, in the
1st Canadian Parliament. The Act replaced
An Act to amend Chapter 62 of the Consolidated Statutes of Canada, and to provide for the better regulation of Fishing and protection of Fisheries passed by the
Province of Canada. The initial Act defined Fishery Officers, who each had
Justice of the Peace powers, and defined forbidden practices in the cod, whale, seal, salmon, lake and river trout, whitefish and bass and pickerel fisheries. This included closed seasons when fish could not be taken and prohibitions in various areas critical to fish reproduction. It also prohibited the dumping into various fish habitats of "prejudicial or deleterious substances" with a fine of not more than . Early copies of revised statutes had separate statutes governing fisheries, pilotage, the department of fisheries, lighthouses, and other marine affairs. The 1905 copy of the
Revised Statutes of Canada has a copy of the Fisheries Act, the minister was empowered to appoint fisheries officers to oversee fisheries, enabled the Minister to create a licensing system for fishermen, broadly prohibited whaling with the exception of instances approved by the minister, statutorily banned
seine nets for use in cod or mackerel fishing, established prohibitions on salmon and trout fishing by means of a
closed season and banned use of swing nets in salmon fishing, protected salmon spawning zones, regulated lobster licenses, gave officials the authority to impound illegally caught fish, banning dams in fishing rivers except as approved by government or for eel weirs, banning using fish as fertilizer, banning certain types of materials from being disposed into waterways, creating a broad regulatory authority for the minister, and creating offences and penalties. The Act notably did separate out
First Nations as being capable of being given special dispensation for
spearfishing by the minister, a likely acknowledgment of
treaty rights.
Updates The contemporary fisheries act has many of the same objectives, including preventing pollution, regulating harvesting seasons, licensing fishers, establishing the Indigenous framework for fishing, creating penalties, empowering officers, and giving the Minister authority to regulate. The regulations under the act are broad, and include regulations on ballast dumping, the
experimental lakes area, marine mammals, wastewater effluent and aquaculture, in addition to more traditional things like regulating provincial fisheries, fish roe, registration of foreign fishing vessels and protecting certain fishing habitats. In general, regulations now take up much of the detail that was formerly enshrined in legislation. The Harper government reduced protections in the
Fisheries Act during its term. Its 2012 amendments reduced protections to only apply to "a commercial, recreational or aboriginal fishery." Previously, the Act prohibited the killing of fish by other than fishing and prohibited any undertakings that caused harmful disruption or destruction of fish habitat. One election issue in the 2015 federal election was the resurrection of environmental protections eliminated during the Harper government. Major changes were approved in 2019, focusing on improved permitting authority for the government, giving authority to regulate inland fisheries entirely through regulation and referencing biodiversity. ==Controversies ==