You do realize that the quota that get leased out is and always has been part of the original 88 and now 85 percent of Commercial quota. If leasing goes away it doesn’t mean that quota is up for grabs. Its still commercial quotaYes, allocation of the resource.
Active commercial fishermen like owner operator. Commercial interests like leasing.
If only active commercial fishermen can have quota, it would free up TAC for recreational.
As long as quota is leasable, strong
interests will oppose TAC reallocation.
It's a pipe dream, but it would give active fishermen, commercial and recreational, more quota.
That’s not my perspective mine is it’s 100% about who owns the quota. Not the Commercial fisher and not the public Fisher, corporations and former Commercial fisherman milking a cash cow. It would be beneficial monetarily for the commercial fisher and as well as maybe open opportunity for the public sector if this was changed. Why should people who don’t fish own and rent out public property! Where else does the government do this?So the issue is not with leasing quotas, because it doesnt matter who owns the quota or who leases it. It is the fact that the commercial allocation is too large and the rec/sporty allocation is too small.
Dairy quota, egg quota, TFL licenses, private forest land awarded decades ago, other species fisheries quotas ..... I'm sure there is more but you get the idea.That’s not my perspective mine is it’s 100% about who owns the quota. Not the Commercial fisher and not the public Fisher, corporations and former Commercial fisherman milking a cash cow. It would be beneficial monetarily for the commercial fisher and as well as maybe open opportunity for the public sector if this was changed. Why should people who don’t fish own and rent out public property! Where else does the government do this?
The whole problem is the sport side doesn't record enough catch. That's the main and probly biggest problem with how to manage the TAC for the sport side. Fix that one and I'd say you fixedYup that is why the unfair and illogical bias benefiting the commercial sector or the public fishery needs to end and change the allocation to at least 75/25. This would be much better for local economies as the public fishery generates at least 2-3 times more money per pound over the commercial sector. Just makes basic economic sense.
I know, it's hard to express a complicated passion subject in a few sentences.You do realize that the quota that get leased out is and always has been part of the original 88 and now 85 percent of Commercial quota. If leasing goes away it doesn’t mean that quota is up for grabs. Its still commercial quota
Yup and some quota systems work and some don’t. The halibut quota need to change to 80/20 allocation - more than a fair allocation with greater economic benefits for the BC economy which we are going to need more than ever now!Dairy quota, egg quota, TFL licenses, private forest land awarded decades ago, other species fisheries quotas ..... I'm sure there is more but you get the idea.
Dairy quota, egg quota, TFL licenses, private forest land awarded decades ago, other species fisheries quotas ..... I'm sure there is more but you get the idea.
Let me put this in terms that are little more relevant to the times . In the beginning Canada and the USA came to an agreement on trade issues and who should get what and how much, a negotiation if you will. Now Trumpy needs more so he starts whining and trying to change the deal.
In case you havent figured it out yet, if you think 85/15 should change........your Trumpy.
I'm not trying to **** people off, just trying to get people to get all the info past and present so they can make informed comments on this issue.I swore to the mods I’d be nice on here now. But you’re making it really hard….
You can do this. Quota is bought/sold and leased every day.The easiest thing to do would be allow rec operators to buy quota the paybacks not great on it as think it’s over 10 times the lease rate but it would be the easiest solution.
No different than the government buying it to give to the natives