Fisheries Act

One of Canada’s oldest and most important environmental laws, the Fisheries Act, was enacted in 1868 – a year after Confederation. In the late 1970s habitat protection provisions were added to the Act, including a prohibition (unless authorized) against the “harmful alteration, disruption or destruction of fish habitat” (HADD). This provision became widely regarded as one of Canada’s most powerful environmental legal protections.

No habitat, no fish. That’s the slogan on old Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) buttons. The science is clear: fish need habitat to survive and flourish. Loss of fish habitat has historically been a chief cause in fisheries decline.

So when two budget omnibus bills in 2012-13 substantially weakened the federal Fisheries Act provisions on fish habitat protection, an outcry arose across the country from scientists, former fisheries Ministers, fishing and wildlife organizations, and environmental groups.

The changes were made with no public participation, respect for First Nations title and rights, or scientific evidence.

Fortunately, the federal government promised to review those changes. In November 2015, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau publicly released the mandate letters for newly appointed federal Cabinet Ministers. In his mandate letter, the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard was tasked with ‘restoring lost protections’ and ‘incorporating modern safeguards’ to the Fisheries Act.

In fall 2016, the government began taking action to fulfill its promises through two related reviews, by a Parliamentary Committee and an online consultation portal. West Coast Environmental Law Association and many others urged the government to reinstate the prohibition on HADD, and to make a number of other changes to improve fisheries management and better protect all fish all across the country.

In February 2018, the federal government tabled Bill C-68, which introduced amendments to the Fisheries Act. The bill included the restoration of important habitat safeguards, stronger enforcement measures and clearer rules for authorizing projects or proposals that may damage habitat. Amendments to this Bill were passed with support from West Coast and many groups across the country, including provisions to protect flows of water as critical components of fish habitat.

Bill C-68 was passed by the Senate and became law in June 2019. The passing of the bill restored key legal safeguards and added new protections to the Fisheries Act, including provisions to protect flows of water as critical components of fish habitat. 

Fish need full protection for the habitats they call home. Now that the 2019 amendments are enshrined in law, West Coast Environmental Law continues to work with the government, Indigenous peoples, partners and stakeholders to ensure that fish and ecosystems in Canada are preserved for generations to come.

Additional resources

WCELA Submission to Committee on Bill C-68 – Fisheries Act
(By West Coast Environmental Law Association, April 2018)
This brief was submitted to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans as part of their review of Bill C-68. It outlines recommended amendments to ensure that the renewed Fisheries Act provides proper safeguards for fish and fish habitat across Canada.

Questions & Answers about the 2018 Proposed Amendments to the Federal Fisheries Act
(By Linda Nowlan and Maryann Watson, February 2018)
Amendments to the Fisheries Act were proposed in Bill C-68, introduced into the House of Commons on February 6th, 2018. This Q&A answers questions about the amendments, and examines how the Bill restores lost protections and introduces modern safeguards.

Top 10 Recommendations for a Renewed Fisheries Act
(By Linda Nowlan, August 2017)
West Coast’s submission to the federal review of the Fisheries Act lays out West Coast Environmental Law Association’s top ten recommendations to strengthen and modernize this important law.

Modernizing the Fisheries Act - Briefing Note
(By West Coast Environmental Law Association, May 2017)
This briefing note includes four outcomes and five specific areas of reform for a new Fisheries Act that would enable supporting policies and programs to sustain healthy fisheries, waters and economies for generations to come.

Habitat 2.0: A new approach to Canada's Fisheries Act
(By West Coast Environmental Law Association and FLOW Canada, November 2016)
This brief – submitted to the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans by West Coast and the Forum for Leadership on Water (FLOW) – establishes the need for national legal fish habitat protection standards, addresses the current state of the law, and sets out recommendations for a modern Fisheries Act.

When wild salmon win — toward a renewed Fisheries Act?
(By Linda Nowlan, October 2016)
West Coast’s Linda Nowlan explains how a renewed Fisheries Act should work to safeguard critical salmon habitat like the area threatened by the Pacific NorthWest LNG project.

Scaling up the Fisheries Act: Restoring lost protections and incorporating modern safeguards
(By West Coast Environmental Law Association, March 2016)
West Coast Environmental Law Association brief outlining preliminary recommendations for achieving key elements of Fisheries Act reform that the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard was tasked with in his 2015 mandate letter.

FisheriesAct.ca
An online portal dedicated to strengthening the Fisheries Act, with links to a petition, resources and an open letter signed by NGOs, First Nations and scientists calling on the federal government to put habitat protection provisions immediately back into the Act, along with stronger monitoring and enforcement.

From ‘Badly Wrong’ to Worse: An Empirical Analysis of Canada's New Approach to Fish Habitat Protection Laws
(By Martin Olszynski , University of Calgary - Faculty of Law, August 2015)
This recent empirical analysis of DFO authorizations makes the case that the Fisheries Act is 'an area of law in need of serious reconsideration.'

Blogs on the Fisheries Act: