The Fisheries Broadcast from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador
Summary: CBC Radio's "The Broadcast," as it is affectionately known, since going on the air in 1951, has been dedicated to covering stories about the fishing industry, reflecting the people and the communities that depend on the sea for their livelihood.
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Podcasts:
Why Greenland plays such a big role in the future of our salmon stocks.
Lobster fishermen suffer damage from a weekend storm of wind and a law that prevents Sunday fishing.
Wild and farmed salmon on our dicussion menu tonight.
The federal government confirms another ISA outbreak on a salmon farm on the South Coast.
The plant operator up there has asked for permission to transfer his processing licence to St. Mary's, and people in New Ferrolle say that will mean the end of the plant and the end of their community.
The cod moratorium and its still-reverberating effects on seabirds.
A group in Bonavista quietly goes about erecting a monument to some of its own lost fishermen. Last weekend, it was unveiled.
We'll hear about DFO's plans for the farmed salmon that turned up in the Garnish River and we'll meet the boy that built the boat in Twillingate.
What did Premier Dunderdale say about Minimun Processing requirements? The reaction was as though she felt they were enshrined in the Terms of Union. But that's not what the premier said. She said, let's talk about it and that's what we'll do tonight.
Coast Guard manages to plug a leak this week in the hull of a sunken ship, the paper carrier Manolis L.
A pending trade deal between Canada and the Europwan Union.
Ottawa breathes down the province's neck to try to force concessions on plant jobs to sweeten international trade talks.
The search for the one name missing from the list of sealers who died in the Newfoundland disaster.
Protests continue at the crab plant in La Scie, but the minister of Fisheries says there's nothing he can do. We'll hear from protestors AND the minister. And after two decades as the head of the union local in Valleyfield, Paul Keane is stepping aside.
The Canadian Sealers Asociation is looking for a few good men and women to be members. Active sealers don't seem big on forking over the 25 dollar membership fee, but you can. Anyone can become a member of the Canadian Sealers association to show their s