On January 15, 2008 Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs Mr. Chuck Strahl visited the community of Pikangikum First Nation.
He was accompanied by the Grand Chief Stan Beardy and his associates.
He was greeted by the Chief, Elders and members of the community and followed by luncheon at the local restaurant.
CRTC Press Release ...
OTTAWA and GATINEAU, Jan. 17 - The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) today approved several initiatives that will benefit Canadians with disabilities and expand broadband services to rural and remote communities. The major local telephone companies were also directed by the Commission to finalize proposals for the dispersal of the funds in their deferral accounts.
From Press Release
In less than two years, Government reduces the number of high-risk First Nation water systems by over half.
Historic government efforts to make it impossible for Aboriginal people to live and prosper in their own communities seems to be working with the migration of people relocating to urban environments to access services and "opportunities".
Examples of the urban strategy for taking care of themselves on the backs of remote and rural communities ...
COO press release ...
TORONTO, Jan. 16 - Ontario Regional Chief Angus Toulouse extended congratulations to the Michipicoten First Nation on their historic land claim settlement with Canada and Ontario. Following a successful ratification vote held on January 12, 2008, Chief Joe Buckell and the Michipicoten First Nation Council authorized a resolution calling for the negotiated land claim agreement to be signed by all three governments.
As the Abriginal population grows and the same level of funding (or even less) continues to be made available by governments, this means that the already underfunded First Nations will be receiving less of these resources as the cities and their institutions, organizations and agencies demand more and more financial support and facilities to take care of themselves.
INUVIK, N.W.T. - The lively five-year-olds in Sandra Ipana's language class chant through the calendar in Inuvialuktun.
JOE FRIESEN - January 15, 2008
ROSEAU RIVER, Manitoba — Shirley Littlejohn lives on the Roseau River First Nation, about 80 kilometres south of Winnipeg.
She was born in 1947 on a reserve that sits in the flood plain between the Red and Roseau Rivers, just east of the highway that runs from Winnipeg to the U.S. border.