Darcy Kejick, a former North Spirit Lake chief and councillor, was presented with two awards at the 15th Annual Nishnawbe Aski Nation Business Awards in Thunder Bay on Wednesday, November 30. He was awarded the Youth Entrepreneur of Year and the Partnership of the Year trophies at this event. Darcy and his wife Susan started Darcy and Susan's Gas Bar in North Spirit Lake in 2001. He told the Chronicle-Journal that he started his business because "it was my dream" and there was a "community need for it".
Other winners include:
The awards gala is organized annually by the Nishnawbe Aski Development Corporation (NADF). Click here for more information about NADF and this annual event (under Business Awards).
News Release from the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation web site at http://www.naaf.ca
Monday, November 28, 2006 - Toronto, ON
At a time when Canada is focussed on First Nation, Métis, and Inuit Peoples, the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation is proud to announce the recipients of the 13th Annual National Aboriginal Achievement Awards
FOURTEEN RECIPIENTS OF THE PRESTIGEOUS ACHIEVEMENT AWARD ANNOUNCED
TORONTO ' A world renowned artist, an entrepreneur from the East coast and an environmentalist from the far North compose a portion of the fourteen recipients of the National Achievement Awards showcasing the overwhelming diversity, contribution and achievement that can be found among Canada's First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples. The awards were announced today by Roberta Jamieson, CEO& President of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation (NAAF).
The 13th Annual National Aboriginal Achievement Awards, can count a number of firsts. Shirley Firth Larsson, the twin sister of an equally successful 2005 NAAA recipient, will be awarded an Award for Sports. As well the Foundation will also for the first time, award a recipient posthumously, as the inspiring and bright star, Myra Cree, sadly recently passed away after having been selected through the juried process, leaving a remarkable legacy.
Roberta Jamieson, CEO of the Foundation, said, "When one achieves greatness for themselves they are in fact achieving greatness for their entire community. "This year's recipients embody the diversity of our peoples and speak to potential realized. They are fantastic role models for our Aboriginal youth and all Canadians; I couldn't be more pleased with this year's recipients."
The 2006 National Aboriginal Achievement Award recipients are a notable group. They are:
This year's 14 recipients will receive their awards at a star-studded gala evening on Friday, January 27th, 2006, in Vancouver at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre.
The fourteen achievers are selected by a national jury comprised of past award recipients and individuals representing First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples from, diverse geographic regions of Canada and areas of the economy.
The awards are a special project of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation, established in 1985. The Foundation provides financial assistance to First Nation, Métis, and Inuit Aboriginal students to realize their educational goals and dreams with more than a total of $2 million in individual scholarships awarded to students this year and $18- million awarded since the project began.
The Foundation is devoted to excellence and providing the educational tools necessary for Aboriginal youth to achieve brighter futures.
For further information contact Scott Cavan, Director of Media Relations at 416-926-0775. Visit our website at www.naaf.ca for the following information:
Award winners announced at 5th Annual Wood WORKS! Awards Gala
Chief Arthur Moore, of Constance Lake First Nation (200 km west of Timmins), and the Deer Lake K-12 School at Deer Lake First Nation (1,000 km northwest of Thunder Bay) won prestigious Wood WORKS! Awards, announced November 24 at the 5th Annual Wood WORKS! Awards Gala, held in Collingwood, Ontario. There were over 300 industry and community leaders, politicians, architects and engineers who came to celebrate Ontario’s finest wood-based construction and advocacy.
Smith Carter Architects & Engineers Inc. and Lavergne Draward & Associates Inc. of Winnipeg, Manitoba, accepted the Jury’s Choice Award (sponsored by The Working Forest) for Deer Lake's new K-12 School. This award recognizes projects that represent excellence in design, use wood in a unique manner and invoke a sense of community spirit and pride.
The designers carefully fit the school into the community and its natural environment of tall, thin, spruce trees. The use of wood referenced historical dwellings and echoed the “deep roots–new beginnings” concept. Even the lighting—a series of skylights in a corridor ascending diagonally in sections and terminating at high level windows—reflects the surroundings, where sunlight feathers in from above the trees. Laminated wood decking was used for the ceilings and roof deck throughout the building, and fir glulam beams and columns were used for the structure. The whole building, in its creative and thoughtful use of wood, represents a solid, warm foundation for learning.
“The Jury selected this building because it harmonizes so well with its surroundings. It’s a place where the past and the future are part of the present, and students will be inspired,” remarked Bérubé.
Chief Arthur Moore received the Building the Future Award -Community Leader (sponsored by the Ontario Forestry Industries Association), which recognizes a leading individual who facilitates the construction of commercial, industrial and institutional projects with wood, and stands out as a persuasive wood advocate. Chief Moore has shown a strong commitment to his community in Constance Lake by investing in local projects, such as the Holistic Education Centre and the Eagle’s Earth Historical Centre. He believes strongly in supporting the local forest industry, which he sees as vital to the livelihood of his community.
“People like Chief Moore are showing us how to maintain a sustainable forestry industry, which will last forever,” commented Marianne Bérubé, Executive Director of Wood WORKS!
Megaconference 7, the world's largest video conference, is now taking place (Thursday, Dec. 1 2005), from 8am to 11pm EST.
A live stream will be available throughout the Megaconference, starting at 8 am. Anyone can view the stream, which is open to all at http://www.megaconference.org
Ontario program participants include York University and the University of Waterloo's drama and speech communication department, which will demonstrate collaborative theatre using videoconferencing technology to link remote sets and actors. Waterloo will present a short live play with colleagues at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois.
Greetings Educators and Community Leaders!
The Canadian Aboriginal Youth Writing Challenge is happening again for the 2005-2006 school year (visit http://www.our-story.ca).
Inspired by the launch of the publication Our Story in 2004, last year the Dominion Institute and Enbridge Inc. challenged young Aboriginal high school students to sharpen their pencils and contribute a short story (800-1400 words) that explored a great moment in Aboriginal history - and the results were phenomenal!
Submissions included topics such as residential schools, the signing of the numbered treaties, the extinction of the Beothuk and passing on traditions between generations. With her story First Contact, Nicole Nicholas of Victoria, BC, was chosen as the 2005 winner by a panel of judges that included Tantoo Cardinal, Tomson Highway, Dwight Dorey and Jose Kusugak.
The first-prize winner will receive a $500 Prize, the opportunity to be profiled in a Canadian Learning Television and Book Television production, to be published in The Beaver Magazine: Canada's History Magazine and to travel to Ottawa to read an excerpt from his/her story at a special celebration event. Students with a story in the top ten will receive a $200 prize. All winning essays will be published online and all participants will receive a letter of recognition for their participation.
The deadline for submissions is May 6, 2006.
There will be special prizes for classes that participate as a group.
If you are interested in encouraging a student or an entire class to participate in the Canadian Aboriginal Youth Writing Challenge please call 1-866-701-1867 or visit http://www.our-story.ca.
Published by Doubleday Canada, Our Story is on sale in bookstores across Canada. Our Story brings together nine leading Aboriginal authors from across the country to explore great moments in history and to consider the significance of these events for Canada's Aboriginal Peoples.
__________________________
Annie Lindsay
Programme Coordinator
The Dominion Institute
416.368.9627 or 866.701.1867
fax 416.368.2111
annie@dominion.ca
It seems that the main people benefiting from the federal government's 2 billion dollar "residential school settlement" are the lawyers who are building their case action suits and "taking care of the victims".
Source: Financial Post (Legal Post)
Date: 2005.11.30
Byline: Sandra Rubin
NEW MERCHANT CLASS
Don't tell Santa, because we've been a bit naughty, but we've had a little peek at the agreement in principle for the settlement in the residential schools class action and, how to put this delicately, there's a new sheriff in town.
The agreement provides $40-million in fees for the Merchant Law Group (that would be Saskatchewan lawyer Tony Merchant) and another $40-million to a national consortium of law firms who, sadly, have to split their take 19 ways.
Did we mention in both cases that's just a base amount? They also get "reasonable disbursements, and GST and PST, if applicable." Quite right. Things such as photocopying, long-distance bills and Chinese food can add up.
Oh, the $80-million? That was just for the billable hours accumulated to Nov. 23.
"You can bet the home fires are burning long into the night working on this settlement agreement," says someone wise about such things. "People can pound away the hours now because they also get to bill from that point forward, plus disbursements and interests.
"The feds are handing out early Christmas presents to the lawyers in this case. The tally is $80- million and counting -- it could easily be 50% more."
My, my. Even $80-million eclipses previous fee awards and gives Harvey Strosberg and his Toronto-area class-action colleagues something to aim for. The previous record was the $56- million the lawyers were awarded on Hep. C. It seemed like foie gras at the time. Now it's starting to seem a bit like chopped liver.
Community members and leaders from remote KO First Nations met online with professional and academic librarians, students along with public officials this past Friday to discuss ways to improve library services in Ontario's far north. Click here to see the workshop website which contains a wealth of information and resources.
Workshop participants from Deer Lake, Keewaywin, North Spirit, Sandy Lake, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, Ottawa and Toronto met via video conference. Other from across the country watched the web streamed video session and contributed online through a monitored chat service. The entire event was archived and is available for viewing at http://webcast.knet.ca/RICTA under the Online Library Workshop event (nearly 8 hours in length).
Participants discussed ways to improve library services in remote nd isolated communities. Chief Raymond Mason of Keewaywin First Nation commented that he recognizes the importance of libraries especially for young people. He likes what he learned during the workshop and looks forward to seeing his community utilizing these resources. Darlene Rae, the e-centre manager of North Spirit Lake says she is excited about the opportunities of establishing a digital library in the north. "This is wonderful. We need a digital library to serve our people better." Freda Kenny, the vice principal of KiHS, reminded participants that "If you want to promote literacy, you also need print. Children and youth need books to promote a love of reading," said. The Honourable James Bartleman, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario opened the workshop saying that improving library services in the north is a pressing need that cannot wait. He recommended to the workshop participants that they use all of the opportunities that modern technology can offer to create a digital library even though a "bricks and mortal" solution might be preferable.
Wawatay Radio is launching a national radio program on December 3 from 10:00am to 2:00pm(CST). National Chief Phil Fontaine will be our in-studio guest in Sioux Lookout. Jon Kim Bell, Director of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation, will participate in some portions of the program, as well as other guests from across the country.
The overall theme and purpose of this program is to connect Aboriginal youth with each other and the First Nations leadership. In particular we hope to:
The investment in broadband telecommunication infrastructure continues to be supported as part of the Aboriginal blueprint laid out at the First Ministers' Meeting this past week in Kelowna. From the information distributed at the First Ministers' Meeting, it appears that Industry Canada's BRAND program will lead the infrastructure development work with the First Nations School program continuing to support the First Nation schools across the country to access and utilize these services. Telehealth is also included as part of the final document as a means of supporting the access to improved health services in Aboriginal communities. See below for links and actual statements from the documents distributed at the First Ministers' Meeting.
From the Government of Canada, Nov 25 Press Release ... GOVERNMENT OF CANADA INVESTS IN IMMEDIATE ACTION TO IMPROVE LIVES OF ABORIGINAL PEOPLES IN CANADA
The Government of Canada will also bring broadband access to an additional 250 communities within 10 years.
From the backgrounder on Aboriginal Education
An Industry Canada SchoolNet initiative, First Nations SchoolNet connects all First Nations schools under federal jurisdiction to the Internet. By improving the connectivity and technical capacities of First Nations schools, the program aims to bridge the digital divide in First Nations schools located in remote and rural communities.
These investments will build on the $700 million, already committed at the September 13, 2004 Special Meeting of
In addressing these priorities, a holistic and distinctions–based approach will be adopted.
First Ministers and National Aboriginal Leaders support Ministers of Health and Aboriginal Affairs Ministers continuing to work collaboratively with Aboriginal Peoples including First Nations, Inuit and Métis regardless of where they live to turn their commitments into concrete action at the regional level and national level.
First Ministers and National Aboriginal Leaders. These initiatives and plans could notably focus on such areas as: