Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam Conservative Party of Canada

A record of fighting for you

Iain Black was born in Winnipeg and moved to BC in 1994, settling in the Tri-Cities in 2000 with his wife, Chris, to start their family. He has extensive volunteer experience coaching or managing Coquitlam soccer and hockey teams, and also with notable BC organizations including Canuck Place Children’s Hospice and Science World. An accomplished […]

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Iain Black will fight for families in Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam

JOIN THE MOVEMENT TO BRING COMMON SENSE BACK TO CANADA

Les conservateurs de gros bon sens demandent à la ministre des Pêches d’écouter les pêcheurs de harengs

Les conservateurs de gros bon sens demandent à la ministre des Pêches d’écouter les pêcheurs de harengs

Grand Falls — Windsor, T.-N. — Clifford Small, député de Coast of Bays-Central-Notre Dame et ministre du Cabinet fantôme conservateur responsable des Pêches, des Océans et de la Garde côtière canadienne ; Rick Perkins, député de South Shore-St. Margarets et ministre du Cabinet fantôme conservateur responsable de l’Innovation, des Sciences et de l’Industrie ; John Williamson, député de New Brunswick Sud-Ouest ; et Chris d’Entremont, député de Nova-Ouest, ont fait la déclaration suivante sur la récente réduction du total autorisé des captures (TAC) de hareng dans le sud-ouest de la Nouvelle-Écosse et dans la baie de Fundy :

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Common Sense Conservatives Call For The Minister Of Fisheries To Listen To The Harvesters Of The Herring Fishery

Common Sense Conservatives Call For The Minister Of Fisheries To Listen To The Harvesters Of The Herring Fishery

Grand Falls – Windsor, NL – Clifford Small, MP for Coast of Bays-Central-Notre Dame and Shadow Minister for Fisheries, Oceans and The Canadian Coast Guard; Rick Perkins, MP for South Shore-St. Margarets and Shadow Minister for Innovation, Science and Industry; John Williamson, MP for New Brunswick Southwest; and Chris d’Entremont, MP for West Nova, released the following statement on the recent reduction of the herring Total Allowable Catch (TAC) in Southwestern Nova Scotia and the Bay of Fundy:

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