FFAW and ASP reach agreement to start snow crab fishery
CBC
After a little more than a week's delay, the snow crab season will begin.
In a statement released by Fish, Food & Allied Workers Sunday evening, it was announced that the fish harvesters union has reached a deal with the Association of Seafood Producers for the 2024 snow crab fishery.
"The minimum price for the 2024 crab fishery is $3.00 per pound," reads the statement.
There will be a reconsideration of the minimum price paid to harvesters after the market for processed crab reaches $6.50 USD.
"This is an historic pricing agreement for harvesters in our province; restoring fairness in the crab fishery and giving harvesters a sharing arrangement they have not seen in a long time," FFAW-Unifor President Greg Pretty said in the statement.
"Our union will continue our work in ensuring harvesters have a buyer for their catch, not just for snow crab, but for all commercially fished species."
The FFAW statement also says that plans for a protest at Confederation Building on Monday are cancelled.
Crab fisherman were tied up since the start of the season after the province's price-setting panel chose a price formula put forward by the ASP, which had set a floor price of $2.60 per pound. The FFAW said its members could not fish under that price formula.
Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Click here to visit our landing page.
While his party has made a cause célèbre out of its battle with the Speaker, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has periodically waxed poetic about the House of Commons — suggesting that its green upholstery is meant to symbolize the fields of the English countryside where commoners met centuries ago before the signing of the Magna Carta.