Archive - Nov 2006

November 16th

Relocation of remote First Nation from traditional lands is not the answer

From http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/editorialsletters/story.html?id=d9a3caae-1b0e-4054-a7be-11fbc4112e6a

Counterpoint: Native assimilation is not the answer - Waubageshig (Harvey McCue) - National Post - Nov 16, 2006

In a recent editorial, this newspaper praised former Ontario cabinet minister Alan Pope for his proposal to relocate the Cree residents of the troubled Kashechewan First Nation from their reserve near James Bay to the outskirts of Timmins, Ont.

But Mr. Pope and his media admirers are merely reiterating what many Canadians have argued for generations is the salvation for First Nations: "Get off the reserve and get a life!" In fact, this sentiment began in earnest with Duncan Campbell Scott who, as the deputy minister for Indian Affairs in the 1800s, officially commented numerous times that the only good Indian was an extinct one, or words to that effect.

If the residents of Kashechewan agree to it, the relocation proposed by Mr. Pope will result in their assimilation. The same would be true of any other isolated First Nations communities that accept this route.

Elsewhere, other First Nations, such as the Cree on the Quebec side of James Bay, are actively pursuing economic and social progress, and rejecting the conventional wisdom that says success for First Nations lies in assimilation. The principal difference between the communities on the two sides of the bay is that the Quebec Cree have acquired authority over their lives.

That authority has enabled the Quebec Cree to fashion a growing regional economy, a quality of life that combines ancient Cree traditions with Western modernization and a cultural confidence that is the bane of Quebec separatists. They have found a successful course that does not involve assimilation. Life is not perfect for the Quebec Cree, but they do have the tools to work at resolving their problems.

The Ontario Cree, by contrast, have been virtually ignored. The communities there have been left to subsist on federal government handouts rather than developing policies for their own benefit. That subsistence has led to what some might call a culture of dependence.

The condition stems from the views of an army of officials, who have been unwilling to see northern Indian communities as self-reliant. And so Ottawa continues to provide a minimal level of services, which ensures that a wholesale social collapse will be avoided but ignores any meaningful consideration of how these communities might become successful. Consequently, the residents lack the tools, i.e., the infrastructure, the institutions, the fiscal resources and, more importantly, the self-determination to do much more than make do with handouts.

Indeed, the federal government doesn't really know what "self-government" means for First Nations. If the Quebec Cree had relied on Ottawa to achieve their local and regional governments, their nation would now be in tatters. Moreover, the process to achieve Indian self-government -- as Ottawa defines it -- is mired in bureaucracy with little guarantee for success.

Relocating northern residents is the easy way out, the quick fix. The slow strangulation by the umbilical cord of government handouts is not a viable option either. Instead, we should support Kashechewan and similarly situated First Nations in creating a northern economy, and ensuring that they have the power necessary to take control of their land and resources.

For two centuries, officials and politicians have been trying to figure out how to get rid of Indians. As their strategic roles as key players in the early economy of the fur trade and as military allies waned, the preferred strategy came to be moving them as far as possible from developing areas onto remote, isolated patches of land. Duncan Campbell Scott predicted that residential schools would possibly be the final step in the process. Failing that, the Indian Act was used as an instrument of the state to get rid of Indians through the loss of Indian status.

Mr. Pope's suggested urban relocation of an entire community is just another step in that desperate process. Assimilation is simply not a justifiable or worthy goal for this country to pursue.

- Waubageshig (Harvey McCue) consults on a variety of First Nations issues

Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards Finalist from Sandy Lake

Founder and Drummer of MYRAGE, Raymond Kakepetum of Sandy Lake First Nation, was suprised to learn his band had been Nominated for Best Rock Album for the 2006 Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards.

The family and friends of Raymond Kakepetum from Sandy Lake, On. would like to congratulate his band called Myrage who have been nominated for Best Rock Album with their album titled “Images” for the 2006 Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards.

Myrage was number 1 for 4 weeks on NCI 105.5 FM Aboriginal Top 30 list and remained on the list for several weeks during 2005 with their song titled "Walk a Fine Line".

The winners will be announced on Friday, November 24th, 2006, at the John Bassett Theatre in the Metro Toronto Convention Centre in Toronto, Ontario.  The music awards show is a part of the Canadian Aboriginal Festival.

Congrats and the best of luck.

Scam artists and companies targeting residential school survivors

It seems that more than the lawyers are now trying to contact residential school survivors to try and get their compensation payments before they are even available.

From http://www.portagedailygraphic.com/Top%20Stories/268750.html

Keeping compensation cheques out of scam artists’ hands - Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, Man. Security Commission and RCMP create plan of attack - By Leighton Klassen - The Daily Graphic - Thursday November 16, 2006

Indian residential school survivors are being warned money-hungry scam artists are on the prowl for their federal compensation.

Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, Manitoba Secur-ities Commission and RCMP detachments across the province are teaming up to keep federal cash in the pockets of its recipients.

“Our concern is that this is public knowledge and there’s a lot of money (distributed to survivors) and that’s when investment scam artists have their ears up,” said Ainsley Cunningham, education officer for Manitoba Securities Commission.

Jennifer Wood, residential schools policy analyst for AMC, said survivors are vulnerable.

“It’s important that the elders are not taken advantage of,” Wood said yesterday. “They’re very vulnerable people and naive .… They don’t know much about fraudulent measures.”

The fear stems from the amount of money Ottawa is distributing as compensation for the suffering experienced at residential schools.

On May 10, the federal Conservative government approved a proposal on a settlement of $10,000 per student, plus an additional $3,000 for each year spent in school. Currently, survivors 65 years old and over as of May 30, 2005, are receiving $8,000 as a first payment, and the remaining $2,000 as a second.

That includes Marina James, 69, who attended Portage Residential School from 1942-51. She said she’s not worried about being scammed because she has close family who watches over her, but she does fear for other survivors.

“It’s terrible that some people don’t realize that there is people like that who try and sell you different things and see how much money you have,” she said from her home on Dakota Tipi First Nation.

She is also aware of how the elderly are often taken advantage of.

“I know this one guy who had a car and he asked a couple of kids to get him stuff from the store,” she explained, adding the man lived alone. “They took off with his money and car.”

The chief of Dakota Plains First Nation, a reserve about 30 kilometres southwest of Portage, is also a residential school survivor. Orville Smoke attended Portage Residential School in 1962. He said he’s well-educated about scams, but fears for the six elderly survivors living on the reserve.

“I’m going to be making an effort to make sure to look out for the elders,” he said yesterday.

Wood said AMC and the securities commission will collaboratively develop information packages that will be distributed to all First Nations.

The brochures, which will likely be ready by the end of the month, will include information on the characteristics of scam artists’ tactics such as the absence of documents or paperwork or an offering of low rates at a high return.

“It will be basic protection messages,” Cunningham said.
And time is of the essence. Wood expects the federal government will approve payments for all ages of residential school survivors, through the common experience payment, later this month. That means a lot of people will be receiving a lot of money.

“It’s for everyone and that’s why this is important,” she said. “There’s 80,000 survivors across Canada.”

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From http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2006/11/15/school-scam.html?ref=rss

Residential schools' ex-students get help against scams - November 15, 2006

Winnipeg RCMP and the Manitoba Securities Commission are joining native leaders to help prevent former residential school students from getting scammed out of thousands of dollars in federal compensation.

The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs said Tuesday it welcomes the expertise of both groups as students of residential schools wait to receive payments ranging from $25,000 to more than $250,000.

"Then we have a collective effort, and that's what we want," said Jennifer Wood, the assembly's residential school compensation co-ordinator.

"We want to show it's a concern on every level because it is out to very fragile individuals, the elders."

"History in the past has shown that scam artists, they don't take very long figuring out who's getting money," said Cpl. Sue Downs of the RCMP's commercial crimes unit in Winnipeg.

"Hurricane Katrina, the flood of '97 here in Manitoba … it seems that scam artists target communities they know that are getting large sums of money."

Downs said she hopes to arrange antifraud workshops on reserves. As well, the assembly will include material from the RCMP and the commission in any information packages it sends out.

Operations already popping up: former student
Former student Ray Mason said he has already heard of one new company based in Edmonton that offers to lend money, with interest, to former students who are expecting large compensation payments.

Mason, chairman of Spirit Wind, a Manitoba-based organization of residential school survivors, said he expects such a company to charge large amounts of interest as students wait months for their cheques.

"That person could lose a good chunk of their compensation claim," Mason said.

As well, he fears the number of similar operators will only grow.

Wood said the large settlements many elderly former students will receive can make them prime targets for scam artists.

"You know, they're not street smart, they're not out here in Winnipeg [or] living in an urban centre. They're living in a community, and they have probably been for most of their lives. The elders are a very vulnerable targeted group of people," she said.

Earlier this fall, former students gave their input on the proposed $1.9-billion federal compensation package in hearings held across Canada, including one in Winnipeg.

If approved, the proposed package would compensate up to 80,000 former students for abuse suffered in the schools and for their loss of language and culture.

Under the proposed settlement package, which was approved by the Conservative government in May, any former student is offered a lump sum of $10,000, plus $3,000 for each year spent in the schools. Former students can seek more compensation if they can prove sexual or physical abuse.

November 16th

First Nation youth gather in Sioux Lookout to share and learn IT skills

Youth workers from 25 different First Nations across northern Ontario came together this week in Sioux Lookout to further develop their IT skills. Lead by Angus Miles (Fort Severn) and Jesse Fiddler (Sandy Lake) this week's training workshop provided everyone with the opportunity to meet each other and share their stories and experiences.

Click here to check out the pictures from this gathering.

Click here to visit the Youth Workers online training and sharing meeting space. (requires registration)

The IT Youth Worker employment project is coordinated by Keewaytinook Okimakanak's K-Net Services with funding support from Industry Canada's First Nations SchoolNet program and HRSDC. Marie Carson, Darlene Rae and Jeannie Carpenter are working together to support the Youth Workers and the training coordinators from across Ontario.

Participants in this week's training workshop include:

  • Attawapiskat Nation - Jean Okimaw
  • Bearskin Lake First Nation - Yvonne Kamenawatamin
  • Constance Lake - Norman J Sutherland
  • Deer Lake First Nation - Curtis Rae
  • Fort Severn First Nation - Lyle Thomas
  • Garden River First Nation - Lisabeth Boissoneau
  • Iskatewizaagegan #39 Independent First Nation (Shoal Lake No 39) - Kelly Blackhorse
  • Kasabonika Lake First Nation - Allison Anderson
  • Keewaywin First Nation - Jason Kakegamic
  • Kingfisher Lake First Nation - Terry Mamakwa
  • Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug First Nation (Big Trout Lake) - Robinson Hudson
  • Lac Seul First Nation - Adam Gordon
  • M'Chigeeng First Nation (West Bay FN) - Richard Debassige
  • New Slate Falls Nation - Desmond Roundhead
  • North Caribou Lake Nation (Weagamow Lake) - Derek Kanate
  • North Spirit Lake First Nation - Corey Rae
  • Ojibways of Onigaming First Nation - Shawn Kelly
  • Pikangikum First Nation  - Gavin Turtle
  • Poplar Hill First Nation - Zachariah Suggashie
  • Sachigo Lake First Nation - Angus Miles - Trainer
  • Sachigo Lake First Nation - Maria Mckay
  • Sandy Lake First Nation -  Curtis Drake
  • Sandy Lake First Nation - Jesse Fiddler - Trainer
  • Wabigoon Lake Ojibway Nation - Tim Gardner
  • Webequie First Nation - Leah Wabasse

The Gift of Diabetes film to be aired on APTN

WORLD TELEVISION PREMIERE! on APTN

The Gift of Diabetes

Tuesday, November 21st - 10pm ET/PT
repeating Wednesday, November 22nd - 1am ET/PT and 2pm ET/PT

In 2001, complications from advanced diabetes left filmmaker Brion Whitford with only 50 percent kidney function and blood sugar levels that were spiraling out of control. The Gift of Diabetes follows Brion's struggle to regain his health by learning about The Medicine Wheel, a holistic tool grounded in an Aboriginal understanding of the interconnectedness of all dimensions of life: the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual.

"The film is a very powerful teaching tool and will go far in educating all in the struggle of living with diabetes."
National Aboriginal Diabetes Association

For more information on THE GIFT OF DIABETES visit - www.nfb.ca

To join the NFB Film Club visit - www.nfb.ca/nfbfilmclub

Tikinagan book wins rave reviews

The recently published Coming Home: The Story of Child and Family Services is earning high praise from First Nations leaders and child welfare specialists.

The 276-page book, published by Tikinagan Child and Family Services in mid-September can now be purchased from the book's recently launched website, www.ComingHomeTikinagan.com .

"Coming Home ... not only helps bring to light the challenges our Frist Nation poeple have endured in the past, and continue to endure," said Chief Donny Morris, KI. "It also illuminates the resilience of our people in continuing to strive for a better life in the face of such hardship."

“It is a chance for all of us to learn from Tikinagan’s experience and to celebrate the resilience and strength of First Nations families and communities,“ said Cindy Blackstock, Executive Director, First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada.

“It is rare that I read a child and family welfare book with information and insights that I’ve not encountered before. Coming Home is such a book,” said Gary Cameron, Professor and Lyle S. Hallman Chair in Child and Family Welfare, Faculty of Social Work, at Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, ON.

“In telling the story of the devastating exposure of the people of Tikinagan to residential schools and to child protection services, Coming Home tells a story relevant to First Nation history across North America and abroad. It does so in an easily accessible manner with compassion and power,” said Cameron.

November 14th

Municipal election results in new leadership for Sioux Lookout and Red Lake

Kathy Poling and Phil Vinet are the new mayors for Sioux Lookout and Red Lake respectively as a result of the municipal elections held yesterday.

From http://www.ckdr.net/news/index.php

Municipal Election Unofficial Results
Posted by Mike Ebbeling on November 13, 2006

Atikokan

Mayor - Dennis Brown

  • Council
    • William Bell
    • Mike Shusterman
    • Bud Dickson
    • Sherwin Durand
    • Charlie Viddal
    • Marj Lamkin

Dryden

Mayor - Anne Krassiliowski

  • Council
    • Gwen Keefe
    • Brian Collins
    • Mike Wood
    • Dennis Wintle
    • Gary Case
    • Mel Fisher
  • Public School Board - Ed Arnold

Ear Falls

Mayor - Ron Bergman

  • Council
    • Kim Thain
    • Robert Doyle
    • Stan Leschuk
    • David Wilson

Ignace

Mayor - Lionel Cloutier

  • Council
    • Kimberley Crossley
    • Dianne Loubier
    • Sherrill Musclow
    • John Taddeo

Machin

Mayor - Garry Parkes

  • Council
    • Stannis Montgomery
    • Laurie Huffman
    • Linda Anderson
    • Paul Kelly
  • Public School Board - Barbara Gauthier

Sioux Lookout

Mayor - Kathy Poling

  • Council
    • Ward 1 - Donald Fenelon
    • Ward 2 - Susan Williams
    • At Large
      • Ben Hancharuk
      • Joyce Timpson
      • James Brohm
      • David Gordon
  • Public School Board - Bob O'Donohue
  • Northwest District School Board - Cathy Bowen

Red Lake

Mayor - Phil Vinet

  • Council
    • Anne Billard
    • Ken Forsythe
    • Donna Malloy
    • Brian Larson
    • Paul Parsons
    • Debra Shushack

CBC radio documentary, 'This Powerful Place' to air on Thursday, Nov 16

THIS POWERFUL PLACE airs Thursday, November 16th at 9.pm. on the CBC radio program Ideas. It's the story of a clash of world views over a piece of land that Aboriginal and corporate cultures consider valuable.... for different reasons.

Jody Porter, CBC Radio reporter in Thunder Bay and former Wawatay News editor, produced this special one hour documentary. In her own words she describes the show as follows ...

This Powerful Place is about a dispute over High Falls near Beardmore Ontario, back in the early 1990s.

First Nations people in the area (mostly Poplar Point Ojibway Nation) protested when they learned a hydro dam was going to be built at the falls.

But the development went ahead.

In the process, the remains of a 400 year old medicine man were unearthed. The project halted for a brief time so the archeology could be done. The white people thought if they just re-buried the bones somewhere else it would solve the 'problem' of the land being sacred to the Ojibway people.

It didn't.

KO team joins NAN education reps in meeting with INAC education officials

NAN's Education Committee lead by Deputy Chief Terry Waboose and Education Advisor Dobi-Dawn Frenette, hosted a meeting with INAC's Regional Education team on Thursday, Nov 9 in Thunder Bay. INAC representatives attending this meeting included:

  • Katherine Knott; Director, Education; (519) 751-2243
  • Connie Charlie; A/Junior Program Officer; (807) 624-1566
  • Cheryl Kylander; Sr Education Officer; (807) 624-1522

Topics discussed during this day long meeting included:

  • Education Priorities: Nishnawbe Aski Nation
  • Education Priorities: Indian and Northern Affairs Canada
  • 06/07 Funding
  • 07/08 Funding
  • Education Authorities
  • National Working Groups
  • Education Policy Framework/Systems and Jurisdiction
  • Special Education
  • Provincial/Federal Relations
  • Intergovernmental Relations
  • Post-secondary (including ISSP)
  • Data sharing
  • Nishnawbe Aski Nation Education meeting
  • Moving Forward

Other issues:

  • Ojibway Cree Cultural Centre
  • Northern Nishnawbe Education Council
  • Keewaytinook Internet High School, presentation
  • Information Technology & Broadband Connections (First Nation SchoolNet Program)

Jim Teskey, KO Education Advisor and Brian Beaton, K-Net Coordinator attended this meeting and did presentations about KiHS and the First Nations SchoolNet initiatives.

Failure to Consult ruling results in further delays for pipeline development

From http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20061111.RMACKENZIE11/TPStory/?query=%22first+nation%22

Court makes 'huge' ruling on pipeline - Says Ottawa failed to consult Dene Tha

DAVID EBNER AND SHAWN MCCARTHY - Posted on 11/11/06 - The Globe and Mail

CALGARY, OTTAWA -- The beleaguered Mackenzie Valley natural gas pipeline was hit with yet another setback yesterday when the Federal Court ruled that Ottawa failed to consult with the Dene Tha First Nation.

The Dene Tha's home is in northern Alberta, at the terminus of the proposed 1,200-kilometre pipeline that would connect natural gas in the Mackenzie Delta with Canadian points to the south.

"The court's conclusion is that the [federal] ministers breached their duty to consult the Dene Tha in . . . the creation of the regulatory and environmental review process," Mr. Justice Michael Phelan of the Federal Court wrote in his decision.

The decision was called "huge" by the Sierra Club of Canada, but it is not immediately known what implications it has for the $7.5-billion Mackenzie project.

The court ruled that the joint review panel, which is assessing the project's social and environmental impacts, cannot file its final report until the court has another hearing to decide on remedies for the Dene Tha.

The remedies hearing is an unusual step and will be the forum for all sides to discuss what should be done. The court said it is a late stage to begin consultations, but added that a "chief consulting officer" could be appointed to work with the Dene Tha.

The court also ruled that the joint review panel couldn't consider any issues related to the Dene Tha until the case is concluded.

The court further suggested that the joint review panel process, which has been running since February, could be restarted, if necessary.

The Dene Tha had argued they were excluded from the creation of the joint review panel. Several Ottawa ministries were respondents in the case, including Indian and Northern Affairs.

The joint review panel is working until next April and had been expected to file a report several months thereafter to the National Energy Board.

Bob Freedman, counsel to the Dene Tha, said the ruling gives his clients "breathing room" to prepare for consultations with Ottawa.

"Our clients are thrilled with the decision and very much hope this will finally press the [federal] government to sit down and work with us, which is what we've been pushing for all along," said Mr. Freedman, a lawyer at Cook Roberts LLP in Victoria. "The court sent a very strong message."

Mr. Freedman said he expects a remedies hearing to occur fairly soon.

Imperial Oil Ltd., the project's main proponent, is also behind schedule, saying this week it won't have a revised cost estimate and plan for the pipeline until some time next year, rather than by the end of this year.

Imperial said it is assessing the ruling.

"We have to understand what the decision means and what the rationale was and what implications it could have for the regulatory process," said Pius Rolheiser, an Imperial spokesman.

A spokesman for Indian and Northern Affairs Minister Jim Prentice said yesterday the minister had not had an opportunity to review the ruling and would not comment.

Nicholas Girard, a spokesman for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, said the government must review the ruling before commenting.

Ottawa could appeal and ask for a stay pending the appeal, but the cabinet has not yet determined a course of action.

The Dene Tha represent about 2,500 people in northern Alberta. They filed their suit in May, 2005, and Federal Court agreed to hear the case last December. The case was heard earlier this year.