• Home
  • About
  • Support Kukukwes.com
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • LinkedIn
Ku'ku'kwes News
  • NS
  • NB
  • PEI
  • NL
  • Opinions
  • Photo Essays
  • Live Blog
Latest News
  • [ May 1, 2023 ] Six Indigenous acts nominated for 2023 ECMA awards Atlantic
  • [ April 25, 2023 ] Mi’kmaw elder leads Earth Day events in Kjipuktuk News
  • [ April 8, 2023 ] NS Mi’kmaw leaders link lack of DFO control over elver eel fishery to shooting of Eskasoni man News
  • [ March 11, 2023 ] Indigenous play part of Neptune Theatre’s upcoming season News
  • [ March 6, 2023 ] Elver eel fishery trials set for Mi’kmaw fishermen in Dartmouth Court News
  • [ February 3, 2023 ] Finding the way Forward exhibit unveiled at the Mi’kmaw Native Friendship Centre News
  • [ January 10, 2023 ] Nova Scotia judge dismisses charges against three Mi’kmaw fishermen News
  • [ November 6, 2022 ] “It’s wild.” Sipekne’katik First Nation elects first female chief News
  • [ October 19, 2022 ] Nova Scotia judge reserves decision in treaty fishing rights case News
  • [ September 15, 2022 ] Mi’kmaw lawyer says federal government wants to limit treaty rights in Marshall decision through the courts News
June 7, 2023

moderate livelihood

News

Lawyer for Mi’kmaw fishermen says charges against them should be dismissed

October 27, 2020 Maureen Googoo
The lawyer representing four Mi’kmaw lobster fishermen in Nova Scotia says all fishery charges against them should be dismissed. “We have four Mi’kmaw fishermen that were fishing under their right to (fish for) a moderate […]
News

Eskasoni fisherman plans to fight fishery charges against him

October 25, 2020 Maureen Googoo
A Mi’kmaw lobster fisherman from Eskasoni First Nation in Nova Scotia says he plans to fight several fishery charges against him. Ashton Bernard, 30, says he was exercising his treaty right to fish for a […]
News

Nova Scotia chiefs rejected $87-million offer from DFO, want moderate livelihood defined

October 5, 2020 Maureen Googoo
The co-chair of the Assembly of Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw Chiefs says negotiations with the federal government over the treaty right to earn a moderate livelihood from the fishery reached an impasse earlier this year because […]
News

Next step for Sipekne’katik lobster harvesters in moderate livelihood fishery is selling catch

September 28, 2020 Maureen Googoo
Terrence Augustine said his first week of lobster fishing under his treaty right to earn a moderate livelihood from the fishery was rough. He said non-Indigenous commercial fishermen cut the lines attached to the 50 […]
News

Sipekne’katik Chief says Mi’kmaw lobster traps vandalized in St. Mary’s Bay over the weekend

September 21, 2020 Maureen Googoo
The Chief of the Sipekne’katik First Nation says lobster harvesters from his community were the target of vandals who cut their trap lines in St. Mary’s Bay over the weekend. Chief Michael Sack, who accused […]
News

Nova Scotia First Nation launches its own moderate livelihood fishery

September 18, 2020 Maureen Googoo
Unable to reach an agreement with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to define a moderate livelihood, one Nova Scotia First Nation has instead launched its own rights-based lobster fishery. The Sipekne’katik First Nation rolled […]
News

Mi’kmaw harvesters confront protesters at wharf in southwestern Nova Scotia

September 15, 2020 Maureen Googoo
Mi’kmaw lobster harvesters confronted a large group of protesters who gathered at a wharf in Weymouth, N.S. Tuesday morning to protest against the Mi’kmaq treaty right to fish for a moderate livelihood. Approximately 300 protesters, […]
News

Sipekne’katik Chief calls on NS Premier, DFO, RCMP to protect Mi’kmaw harvesters’ treaty rights

September 15, 2020 Maureen Googoo
The chief of the Sipekne’katik First Nation in Nova Scotia is calling for the Nova Scotia premier, the minister of Fisheries and Oceans and the RCMP to protect Mi’kmaw lobster harvesters from harassment while they […]
News

Mi’kmaw lobster harvesters feeling harassed for practising moderate livelihood fishery

September 4, 2020 Maureen Googoo
Mi’kmaw lobster harvesters in southwestern Nova Scotia say they feel harassed by non-Indigenous harvesters for practicing their treaty right to earning a moderate livelihood by setting lobster traps in St. Mary’s Bay. “It’s been very […]
News

Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw lobster harvester to file an injunction against DFO for seizing traps

September 1, 2020 Maureen Googoo
A Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw lobster harvester plans to file an injunction against the Department of Fisheries and Oceans for seizing his traps in the Bay of Fundy last weekend. “I’m going to get (my lawyer) […]
News

Sipekne’katik harvesters sell lobster on Digby wharf to show solidarity for treaty rights

October 4, 2019 Maureen Googoo
Harvesters with the Sipekne’katik First Nation in Nova Scotia dropped lobster traps in waters in the Annapolis Basin and sold their catch on the wharf in Digby Thursday to make a point they have a […]
News

A Mi’kmaw fisherman is fighting the same fishery charges his father faced 20 years ago

September 24, 2019 Maureen Googoo
A young Mi’kmaw man from Nova Scotia is vowing to fight fishery charges against him like his father did 20 years ago. Leon Knockwood, who is from Sipekne’katik First Nation, N.S. has been charged with […]
News

NS Mi’kmaw fishermen say DFO seized lobster traps tagged under moderate livelihood

August 20, 2019 Maureen Googoo
Editor’s note: Updated at 10:52 p.m. Includes response from DFO. Two Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw fishermen say the Department of Fisheries and Oceans are violating their treaty right to fish for a moderate livelihood by seizing […]
Maritimes

Defining a Moderate Livelihood: Part 2

May 15, 2019 Olivia Blackmore
Editor’s Note: This news story is the last in a two-part series examining the issue of defining ‘moderate livelihood’ as the 20th anniversary of the 1999 Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the Donald Marshall, […]
Maritimes

Defining a ‘Moderate Livelihood’: Part 1

May 13, 2019 Olivia Blackmore
Editor’s Note: This news story is the first in a two-part series examining the issue of defining ‘moderate livelihood’ as the 20th anniversary of the 1999 Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the Donald Marshall, […]

Posts navigation

« 1 2 3 »

Thanks Patreon Supporters

John Tattrie | Rochelle Owen | Peter Cole | Gini Dickie | David Leonard | Chris Benjamin | Grace Szucs | Kelly Toughill | Diana Lewis | Sheree Fitch | Tim Bousquet | Kim Kierans | Jesse | Ian Porter | Courtney | Cheryl Knockwood | Jason Peters | Drew Moore | Terra Tailleur | G. Richard Perry | Robert Devet | Dana Dorion | Stephanie Boudreaux | Judith Moses | Mary Campbell | Stephen Puddicombe | Benjamin MacLeod | Chris LaPorte | Christina MacDonald | Nancy Elliot | Michael Bowen | Trevor Bernard | Louise Jalbert | Bretten Hannam | Tara Taylor | Dan David | Nathan Sack | Brian Gifford | Adam Cox | De-anne Sack | Laura Rhodes | Matthew MacLeod | Nic Melony | Shelagh Rogers | Glennie Langille | Stephen Kimber | Judi Milne | Peggy MacKinnon | Lila Pine | Elizabeth Church | Heather Elliot | Jasmine Johnson | Phil | Christine Oreskovich | Virve Sandstrom | Chrisanna Doyle | Heather Dennis | Mark Jobin | Shared Value Solutions | Oscar Baker | Christina Macdonald | Shannon Rhode | Parker Donham | Dave Hardy | Sebastien Labelle | Marianne Welsh | Lukas Pearse | Greg Taylor | Bruce Spence | Jalana Lewis

Advertisement

Follow Us on Facebook

Follow Us on Twitter

Support Kukukwes.com

Kukukwes.com is the only independent news website that covers Indigenous news in Atlantic Canada. We rely on monthly subscriptions in order to provide news coverage to our readers.

Please visit our crowdfunding site, Patreon.com/Kukukwes and sign up for a monthly subscription. Your support goes towards funding independent Indigenous journalism in Atlantic Canada.

Contact Us

Email: news@kukukwes.com

Phone/Text/WhatsApp: 902-805-6367

Follow Us
Search Kukukwes.com

Copyright ©Ku'ku'kwes News 2022

Thank you all for helping us reach our first crowdfunding goal.
Help us now reach our 2nd goal of $4,000 USD per month.