November 8, 2002
Nunaviks offshore
deal: highlights
Heres a summary
of whats in the Nunavik offshore AIP
ODILE
NELSON
KUUJJUAQ After nearly
a decade of negotiations, Makivik Corporation and the federal government signed
an agreement-in-principle for Nunaviks offshore claim two weeks ago in
Montreal.
The agreement establishes
the constitutional right of Nunavimmiut to manage the resources and economic
development of their traditional harvesting region off the shores of Northern
Quebec a region not addressed in the 1975 James Bay and Northern Quebec
agreement.
Makivik initially asked
the federal government for a reported $500 million in compensation, and numerous
programs, including facilities for historical research, a Nunavik Inuit youth
and cultural support program, and an income security program that would allow
Nunavimmiut to harvest on a full-time basis.
Here is a brief summary
of what Makivik and the federal government signed.
Nunaviks marine
region will encircle Northern Quebecs coast. The proposed area begins
in the waters off Chisasibi and extends upward along Hudson Bays eastern
waters until it reaches its northernmost point, just beyond Salisbury Island.
It then returns southward, its border dividing the Hudson Strait roughly halfway
between Baffin Island and Quebec, until it ends on the eastern side of the Button
Islands near the Labrador Sea:
The federal government
will pay $50 million in capital transfer payments to Makivik, on behalf of Nunavimmiut,
over several years;
Nunavimmiut will
have surface and subsurface rights to 80 per cent of the regions islands;
Makivik and the
federal government will share in the marine regions revenues;
A Nunavik-led wildlife
board will be created and it will become the "main institution of wildlife
management in the Nunavik Marine Region."
The wildlife board
will establish the total allowable take and basic needs levels for all wildlife
(except anadromous fish), trophy fees, the designation of endangered species,
boundaries for protected areas not including national parks, and the promotion
of research in the region.
The federal government
will give the wildlife board $5 million to help its research activities.
The government however
will continue to hold the "ultimate responsibility for wildlife management"
in the region. The federal government must still approve any decision regarding
the total allowable take or basic needs levels made by the wildlife board.
The agreement constitutionally
guarantees Nunavimmiut a percentage of turbot catches in some areas outside
the Nunavik Marine Region. Nunaviks Inuit will be entitled to four per
cent of the total allowable turbot catch in the Southern Davis Strait Zone when
the catch is less than 5,500 metric tonnes and 10 per cent when the catch is
greater than 5,500 tonnes.
Nunavimmiut are
also guaranteed seven per cent of any increase in the total allowable shrimp
catch (established the year the final agreement is signed) in the Southern Davis
Strait Zone and 8.8 per cent in the Northern Davis Strait Zone.
Nunavik Inuit will
have the chance to establish and operate any new commercial operations in the
marine region before other outside organizations. This provision, however, does
not apply to businesses involved in "non-consumptive" uses of wildlife,
recreational fishing or the marketing and processing of wildlife parts or products
in the region.
The federal government
may continue to issue existing commercial fishing licenses to "whomever
the minister chooses."
Each Nunavik community
will have its own local wildlife organization or LNUK, local "nunavimmi
umajutvijiit katajuaqatigninga," which consult with a regional RNUK. The
RNUK will be made up of members from each Nunavik community and will advise
the wildlife board on the concerns of the LNUKs. The RNUK is also responsible
for regulation and monitoring of harvesting practices among LNUKs.
A Nunavik Marine
Region Planning Commission will develop land use planning in the region Cleaning
up hazardous and non-hazardous waste sites will be its responsibility.
The agreement also
creates a Nunavik Marine Region Impact Review Board to study the effects development
has on the region.
The federal government
must consult with Nunavimmiut when embarking on an international agreement that
could impact the Nunavik Marine Region.
Nunaviks still
unsettled claim to some portions of Labrador will be dealt with at a later date.
The agreement-in-principle
states the federal government and Makivik should sign the final agreement within
a year.
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