May 20, 2005
Hunters shoot down
proposed wildlife regulations
"We have to do
some more work on it to make sure it fits the whole of Nunavut"
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
David
Aksawnee, chair of the Kivalliq Wildlife Board, called on Nunavummiut to look
"very seriously" at the proposed regulations before the newly scheduled
consultation meetings. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Hunters and Inuit representatives
have won a back-room battle against the government of Nunavut to delay new wildlife
regulations, as politicians cancelled key consultation meetings this week.
The cancellations mean
the government had to backpedal on what hunters described as an ambitious, even
unrealistic plan to enact new regulations under the Nunavut Wildlife Act on
July 9.
No new target date was
released before press time this week.
Until now, hunters were
criticizing the government for rushing to enact the regulations on that date
- Nunavut Day - without giving them more time to review the newly drafted rules.
The government abandoned
their timeline because it didn't want to pay the political price of dismissing
the hunters' request, according to Sytukie Joamie, a board member of Iqaluit's
Amarok Hunters and Trappers Association.
"Wildlife issues are
something that are too important to us on a day to day basis," Joamie said.
"It's too important for the government to ram... this one through.
"Time will tell if
the government gets passing marks on this one."
Environment Minister Olayuk
Akesuk confirmed in an interview that the government would not be sticking to
its original schedule for consultations on the drafted wildlife regulations.
Government officials were
going to hold meetings on May 16 in Iqaluit, followed by meetings in Rankin
Inlet and Cambridge Bay. Two representatives for hunters from each community
were expected to attend.
The government backed off
from their planned timeline, after facing fierce opposition from Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc., regional wildlife organizations, hunters and trappers organizations, and
the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board.
A draft of the regulations
show NTI has denounced several proposed changes to the rules governing hunting
in Nunavut. They include total allowable harvest numbers, or limitations, on
hunting muskox, wolverine and grizzly bear - which have reportedly been removed
for separate negotiations.
David Aksawnee, a hunting
representative for the Kivalliq region, said they needed to delay consultations,
mainly to give unilingual Inuit enough time to read the changes, and prepare
their comments for the meetings.
Aksawnee said copies of
the proposed regulations were available in English in late April.
But Inuktitut copies weren't
available until earlier this month.
Aksawnee said the government
also didn't take into account how difficult it would be to gather hunters for
meetings in the spring, when many are out hunting.
"We have to do some
more work on it to make sure it fits the whole of Nunavut," said Aksawnee,
chair of the Kivalliq Wildlife Board.
"We're going to be
using these [regulations] for generations to come."
Government officials and
hunters contacted by Nunatsiaq News declined to comment earlier this
week about new dates for the meetings, saying that they were still discussing
the new schedule.
NTI officials also said
they wouldn't comment on the drafted regulations until public consultation meetings
begin.
The proposed regulations
come from years of negotiations between NTI, the NWMB, the GN and the three
regional hunting groups.
The Nunavut Wildlife Act
passed third reading in December 2003, replacing 1978 legislation inherited
from the government of the Northwest Territories.
But the government still
needs to complete consultations on the 22 sets of proposed regulations before
the Act comes into effect.
The regulations outline
who is allowed to hunt, how much they can hunt, and how they have to report
their harvest.
A draft of the regulations
show NTI isn't happy with all the pending changes. A section called "Notes"
says NTI objects to various proposed regulations, such as administrative changes
to how HTOs regulate assignments of hunting rights from Inuit to non-Inuit.
Another sensitive area
is total allowable harvest orders, similar to quotas under the previous wildlife
management regime. Hunters who have seen the proposed regulations feel the government
isn't giving communities enough input in establishing limitations.
NTI also rejects the proposed
regulations to change limitations for non-Inuit resident hunters. Currently,
non-beneficiaries can hunt up to five barren ground caribou per year.
The proposed regulations
would only limit non-Inuit to possessing five harvested caribou, at any time.
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