Indigenous fishers, co-operatives are winners in Ottawa's shuffle of baby eel quotas

Some longtime holders of licences to fish for lucrative baby eels are still facing quota decreases under Ottawa鈥檚 latest proposals, after battling against shifting their catch to former employees. Baby eels, also known as elvers, swim in a tank after being caught in the Penobscot River, Saturday, May 15, 2021, in Brewer, Maine. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Robert F. Bukaty

HALIFAX - Indigenous elver fishers who once were at odds with federal fisheries officers say they're hopeful that a new plan to provide them quotas this season will create more peace on the water.

Earlier this month, a letter released by the federal Fisheries Department proposed a new quota system for the lucrative baby eel fishery that shifts 50 per cent of the total allowable catch of about 9,960 kilograms to First Nations fishers from commercial licence holders. 聽

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