Two AFN Press Releases on this gathering ...
VANCOUVER, Feb. 20 /CNW Telbec/ - Today, on the second day of the symposium Implementing the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples a panel of international law experts will discuss Canada's stance on the UN Declaration. "The Declaration and Canadian Law" panel begins at 9:15 a.m.
AFN press release
OTTAWA, Feb. 18 - In order to address persistently low employment rates, First Nations must increase their involvement in the decision-making process on the design, development, and delivery of employment and training programs. The AFN's 2008 federal pre- budget submission calls for at least $1.3 billion to close the growing gap in education, employment and training funding.
The following two articles demonstrate that provincial governments are finally recognizing the importance and value of working cooperatively with First Nations to ensure economic opportunities can grow in their regions ...
Brad Wall, Premier of Saskatchewan - February 18, 2008
ARDOCH ALGONQUIN FIRST NATION press release
From the National Post series Rethinking the Reserve
Allison Hanes, February 15, 2008
From property taxes to private schools, condos to casinos: How a new generation of aboriginal people is trading reliance on government for a return to self-sufficiency. This is the final instalment in a five-part series examining solutions to the challenges that plague the reserve system.
More and more young people are sharing their stories online, using the different social networks and by producing short videos that are posted online for others to watch and learn about their struggles and experiences. Now the students and staff at the Eel Ground First Nation school have won an important national award recognizing their work (see the story below).
The school is now fundraising to continue their Drama Club by selling DVD copies of their production, The Simon Bishop Story.
For more information about their production, contact the principal at
Keith Lacey
Should city councillors in Timmins be voicing their opinion about how senior levels of government conduct their business in remote communities hundreds of miles away?
By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO - The approval of a new De Beers Canada exploration project and some 1,500 other mining claims in Ontario's northern boreal forest suggests the provincial government is putting the interests of the mining industry before the concerns of the region's residents, environmentalists said Wednesday.