Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

New hunting rules fuel division in B.C., four First Nations say

The May 19 announcement from the B.C. Ministry of Forests outlines a suite of changes  to hunting regulations, including closures and reductions to moose  hunting and nixing caribou hunting in the Peace River area.
moose

The first line of a provincial announcement on new hunting rules reads: “In partnership with First Nations, the  B.C. government is making changes.” But four northeast B.C. First  Nations that will be particularly impacted by the province’s decision  say they were left out of this partnership. 

The May 19 announcement from the B.C. Ministry of Forests outlines a suite of changes  to hunting regulations, including closures and reductions to moose  hunting and nixing caribou hunting in the Peace River area. The  government says this is needed to protect moose and caribou populations  impacted by decades of heavy industrial development. 

Four Treaty 8 nations — Doig River,  Halfway River, Prophet River and West Moberley — claim that, despite  meeting with the government in advance of this decision, their input was  ignored. They say the new restrictions will have negative impacts on  Indigenous and non-Indigenous residents as local hunters and outfitters  were not given priority tags.

“The regulations create disproportionate  impacts among Treaty 8 Nations and for local residents, and were made in  a manner that undermines the new path forward that we were promised,”  the nations wrote in a joint press release published May 30.

The restrictions are a stop-gap solution which will be revisited next year, according to the ministry. While the  government’s announcement noted the decisions “support reconciliation,”  the First Nations leaders say it will fuel division. 

“The regulatory changes are a unilateral  action of the minister of forests that do not reflect the proposals  advanced by Treaty 8 First Nations,” Valerie Askoty, Chief of Prophet  River First Nation, said in a statement. “Our proposals sought to  protect our rights under Treaty 8 while balancing the interests of  neighbouring resident hunters and guide outfitters.” 

The Ministry of Forests did not respond to The Narwhal’s requests for comment prior to publication.

B.C. hunting rules reduce moose and caribou harvest, but fail to address other pressures on wildlife

The hunting restrictions come as the  province grapples with a landmark court case that outlined the scale and  source of ecosystem imbalance in the region.  

Last year, the B.C. Supreme Court found the province guilty  of infringing on the rights of another Treaty 8 signatory, Blueberry  River First Nations, by permitting and encouraging widespread logging  and oil and gas extraction to the point members could no longer exercise  their rights to hunt, trap and fish. The 2021 ruling  was an indictment of how B.C.’s conduct on the northeast B.C. landscape  over decades piled up, impacting people, wildlife and ecosystems.

According to Jesse Zeman, executive director of the BC Wildlife Federation, these new restrictions are a  response to the ruling, but the province’s focus on hunting instead of  industry doesn’t add up. 

“The court said, ‘Get a handle on  cumulative effects’ and the province is saying, ‘Well, we’re gonna get  rid of half of the hunters and half of the moose harvest … and we’re  going to continue to approve projects,” he said in an interview.

Those projects, he said, include continued oil and gas extraction and construction of the Site C dam.

The Ministry of Land, Water and Resource  Stewardship said it is working with Blueberry River First Nations and  other Treaty 8 nations on a “province-wide regime to address cumulative  effects.”

“In October 2021, we signed an agreement  with Blueberry River First Nations as an important first step in  responding to cumulative effects, providing stability and certainty for  195 permit holders, and supporting Blueberry with $60 million to heal  the land, create jobs and protect their traditional way of life,” a  spokesperson told The Narwhal in an emailed statement.

Of course, cumulative effects do include  impacts to wildlife populations, but Zeman said with about 60,000 moose  in the region there’s plenty of room for harvesting without it becoming  unsustainable.

The way in which the regulatory changes  were implemented also tips the scales in favour of hunters based in more  populous parts of the province, he added. The changes include closures  in some areas of the region and a shift from open season to limited  entry in others. Limited entry means anyone wanting to harvest a moose,  say, has to put their name into a draw and tickets are issued through a  lottery system. 

It becomes a numbers game, in other words. 

“We have members up there who are third,  fourth generation people who have large chunks of land where they can go  out their back door and teach their kids how to hunt,” Zeman said. 

He said the majority of hunters in the  province are based in the south compared to a small fraction in the  northeast. When the Peace region moves to a limited-entry hunt, “chances  are most of the hunting opportunities will now flow to people who do  not live in that region.”

The Ministry of Land, Water and Resource  Stewardship said it could not comment directly on the new hunting  regulations but noted it plans to establish regional advisory tables to  work with stakeholders.

“We’ll be looking closely at measures such  as improved inventory of wildlife populations and compulsory reporting  data for harvested animals. This will help inform the path forward for  wildlife stewardship, based on new data gathered as we monitor the  impact of the interim hunting regulations that were recently announced.”

First Nations wanted a solution that protected local hunters and guide outfitters

The nations don’t disagree that there are  pressures facing moose and caribou — that’s why they were at the table  in the first place. The problem, they say, is the province is  perpetuating divisiveness.

“Our nations, alongside other Treaty 8  First Nations, engaged the province to address those impacts by closing  the open seasons in a manner that would balance non-Indigenous hunting  in the territory with protections for our treaty right to hunt,” they  wrote in the press release. “Our preference was to shield local hunters  from the effects of the closure by providing priority allocation of tags  and we sought ways to permit guide outfitters to be left whole.”

Scott Ellis, executive director of the  Guide Outfitters Association of B.C., told The Narwhal there’s no  question the impacts of provincially approved development have changed  the landscape.

“The cumulative effects are real: roads,  logging, powerlines, oil and gas,” he said in an interview. “We see the  cumulative effects where they are: Blueberry area and across the whole  region. It’s a pretty big hunk of dirt.” 

But he agreed with the nations’ assessment  of the changes and said it comes down to what he described as the  “clunkiness” of provincial policies.

“Under the [limited-entry hunt], you’re  not able to give some kind of priority to the locals within the  northeast region on Treaty 8 lands,” he said. “I applaud the First  Nations for trying to minimize the impact to guide outfitters and local  resident hunters.”

“My fear here is this solution is very divisive,” he added. “First Nations will be blamed and that should not be the case.”

‘We need to find ways to live together’

Earlier this year, while the province was  working on what the proposed changes would look like, Judy Desjarlais,  Chief of Blueberry River First Nations, received a death threat.  The province and the First Nations had been discussing changes to  hunting regulations as part of the ongoing negotiations related to the  2021 court ruling. 

“I understand that hunting is a big part  of the way of life for all residents of northeast B.C., whether  Indigenous or not,” Desjarlais said in a statement published at the time. “This reprehensible incident underscores the sensitivity of this subject.”

The tension between local and non-resident hunters is nothing new for those who call the region home.

“We’ve been hammered with way more hunters  in recent years, as people are coming into our territory to hunt after  open seasons elsewhere were shut down,” Roland Willson, Chief of West  Moberley First Nations, said in a statement. “This means a huge decline  in our members’ ability to successfully harvest moose in a meaningful  and culturally appropriate way.”

But according to Willson, B.C.’s decision  adds fuel to the fire at a crucial moment when everyone in the region,  Indigenous and non-Indigenous, needs to come together and work on  solutions. 

“We are very unhappy that the province  disregarded our recommendations and made a unilateral decision. Our  friends and neighbours in the Peace should understand that we are trying  to protect their interests as well as safeguarding our own Treaty  Rights. In the end, all of us up here are Treaty people, and we need to  find ways to live together.”