Caribou Marketing Board: Regulating wild food suggested to ease Arctic hunger
Northerners could get relief from sky-high grocery bills if Ottawa were to help regulate and encourage the sale of food harvested from the land, a federal advisory board has concluded.
In a report released Monday, the National Indigenous Economic Development Board recommends changes to how so-called country food is exchanged. They include regulations on buying and selling to safety standards and even marketing boards to explore potential sales outside the North.
“There appears to be support for establishing a regulatory framework to guide and regulate the selling and marketing of traditional food,” said board member Hilda Broomfield Letemplier.
“We want to look at providing a statutory foundation for all matters affecting the gathering, sharing and selling of country food in the North.”