While in Sioux Lookout, INAC Minister Prentice announced the funding for four water plant construction and upgrade initiatives that have been on the INAC books for a couple of years.
INAC press release ...
INAC ANNOUNCES $12.8 MILLION FOR WATER PROJECTS IN TREATY 5 & 9 FIRST NATIONS
SIOUX LOOKOUT, ONTARIO (April 11, 2007) — The Honourable Jim Prentice, Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada and Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians, today announced $12.8 million for water treatment plant upgrades and construction in one Treaty 5 and three Treaty 9 communities located in Northwestern Ontario.
"Today, I am pleased to announce these projects that will address water quality issues in four communities, including Keewaywin First Nation, one of the 21 communities identified one year ago as most at risk for waterborne health hazards in my Plan of Action for Drinking Water in First Nations Communities," said Minister Prentice.
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) will provide funding as follows:
"The government is making substantial progress ensuring there is a reliable supply of safe, clean drinking water in First Nation communities," said Minister Prentice. "Last month I tabled a report in Parliament that details the improvements that have been made over the past 12 months on water quality on reserve. That progress is continuing.
For more information please contact:
Bill Rodgers
Director of Communications
Office of the Honourable Jim Prentice
(819) 997-0002
Media Relations
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada
(819) 953-1160
Backgrounder - Progress on Water Treatment Plants in Treaty 5 and 9 Communities
Keewaywin (Approximately $8.9 million for construction of water treatment plant)
Keewaywin's new water treatment system will be a conventional chemically-assisted filtration system with granular-activated carbon filtration. Construction is expected to begin in January 2008. Keewaywin First Nation is a remote Cree community, 350 kilometres northeast of Sioux Lookout, that is accessible year-round by air. Total membership is 654 people, 354 of whom live on reserve.
Fort Albany (About $2 million for upgrades to the community's water treatment system)
INAC has been working with Fort Albany First Nation and other business partners to repair or replace some key components of the water treatment plant, the low lift station, and the wastewater pumping station. Scheduled completion date is October 2007. Fort Albany First Nation is a Cree community, 450 kilometres north of Timmins and 700 kilometres northwest of North Bay. The community's membership is 3,880 people, with 2,354 on reserve.
Attawapiskat (Approximately $1.1 million towards water treatment plant repair project)
The project involves repairing and replacing some of the key components of the community's water treatment plant. This work will improve the quality of water, and is scheduled for completion in July 2007. Attawapiskat First Nation is 350 kilometres northwest of Moosonee and is accessible year-round by air. This Cree community's total registered population is 2,870 people, 1,454 of whom live on reserve.
Moose Cree (Close to $800,000 for repairs and upgrades to Moose Factory water treatment plant)
In July 2006, an evaluation was conducted on damage to the water treatment plant's intake structure. It was determined that repairs were required to maintain a reliable water supply. While repairs were completed in October 2006, the long-term operation of the intake structure requires additional upgrades, scheduled to be completed during the summer of 2007. Moose Cree First Nation is located 300 kilometres north of Timmins. The First Nation has a membership of 3,632 people with 1,638 on reserve.
UN Body Holds Canada Responsible for Corporations’ Actions Abroad
By Mark Cherrington. April 10, 2007, World Indigenous News
In a groundbreaking decision, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) has told Canada that it must rein in Canadian corporations operating on Indian land in the United States.
The finding, issued in early March, was in response to a petition filed by the Western Shoshone Defense Project about the actions of Canadian resource-extraction companies operating on the tribe’s land in the western United States. Among other things, the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, which has been ratified by both Canada and the United States, requires states to "guarantee the right of everyone ... in the enjoyment of ... economic, social, and cultural rights ... and the right to public health." The Shoshone petition claimed that these are the areas in which the Canadian companies are affecting them.
The petition especially targets Barrick Gold Corporation, the largest gold mining company in the world. Gold mining uses large amounts of toxic mercury and creates cyanide-laced leaching ponds, both of which threaten Shoshones’ right to health. The blasting used to open mining sites destroys sacred areas, which violates the tribe’s cultural rights to culture, and mining roads disrupt wildlife, undermining their traditional ways of finding food. Gold mining also requires vast amounts of water, which dries up springs and other water sources that the Shoshone need for health. The Betze mine alone uses 70,000 gallons per minute, and it is hardly alone. Western Shoshone lands are the third-largest gold producing region in the world, and there are six other Canadian gold companies besides Barrick operating there, with more applications for leases already under consideration.
The Shoshone have targeted Canada in part because the United States has failed to take any action to protect Shoshone lands. On the contrary, the U.S. government has declared most of Shoshone territory to be federal public land open to resource extraction and other commercial activities. The treaty protecting the original Western Shoshone territory—some 60 million acres from southern Idaho to California’s Mojave Desert—is still valid, but the government has gotten around the treaty by invoking a principle it calls "gradual encroachment." This legal tautology has been discredited by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, but the United States has ignored those findings.
In fact, the government has been seeking ways of making their lands even more available to encroachment. Until now, extraction industries have been operating under a federal lease arrangement, but in 2004 Republican congressman Richard Pombo introduced an amendment to a budget bill that would allow foreign companies to buy this "public" Shoshone land for $1,000 an acre. (The bill was passed by the House of Representatives but defeated in the Senate.) And a second bill, introduced by Republican congressman James Gibbons (now governor of Nevada), would have offered more than 60,000 acres of Shoshone land for sale to the Canadian company Placer Dome, now owned by Barrick Gold.
The racial discrimination treaty is a binding agreement for Canada, which, like all state parties, has to submit to biannual review by the CERD Committee, the treaty’s enforcement body. CERD reviews the country’s report (and any accompanying unofficial "shadow reports" like the Western Shoshones’) and issues observations and recommendations like the one regarding Canada, which read in part: "The committee encourages the state party to take appropriate legislative or administrative measures to prevent acts of transnational corporations registered in Canada which have a negative impact on the enjoyment of rights of indigenous peoples in territories outside Canada. In particular, the committee recommends to the state party that it explore ways to hold transnational corporations registered in Canada accountable."
Will Canada act on that recommendation? One hopeful sign in that regard is a report published on March 29 by Canada’s National Roundtables on Corporate Social Responsibility and Canadian Extractive Industries in Developing Countries. Among many recommendations in this comprehensive government report, are several that stress the need to protect the rights of indigenous peoples in the areas where Canadian companies operate.
Sources and Further Reading:
Sandy Lake First Nation is undertaking a review of their governance structure to find out if Sandy lake First Nation Band Members want more involvement in directing the actions of the Chief and Council.
Visit their new web site at http://sandylake.firstnation.ca/governance/ for more information about this exciting undertaking.
The purpose of the Sandy Lake Governance project is to create a system of governance that receives a mandate from, and is accountable to the membership, using traditional and contemporary ideas.
The important part of creating a governance system is to ask the community people what a governance system should look like and what it should include.
So the governance project is holding small group sessions (focus groups) to find out how Sandy Lake membership want the leadership to act.
During the consultation process, community members are asked to consider the following questions:
For more information or to provide feeback on the Governance Project, you can reach the Project Coordinator Ennis Fiddler by:
Ennis Fiddler
Box 375
Sandy Lake, Ontario
P0V 1V0
Phone: (807) 774-1098
Email: ennisfiddler@knet.ca
The Northern Development Councils (NDCs) invite you to participate in a dialogue on Growing and Strengthening Northern Business on Thursday April 12th at the Forest Inn. The dialogue session will take place from 11:30 am until 1:00 pm. Lunch will be served. Deadline for registering for this session is noon today (Tuesday, April 10).
The Northern Development Councils have developed 17 strategies to review and provide comment on.
The strategies were narrowed down from recommendations taken from over 100 studies and reports on Northern Ontario. Some of the strategies look at improvements to community infrastructure, transportation systems, health care, improvements to existing resource sectors, new technology, research and education, and tax incentives, just to name a few.
Public input will be summarized by the Northern Development Councils and presented to the Minister of Northern Development and Mines for review and consideration in developing new programs to assist Northern Ontario … your input is invaluable! Your input will help the NDCs to prioritize the strategies and finalize recommendations to the Minister of Northern Development Mines.
If you are unable to attend a public consultation session in your area, please complete our online survey at the following web site to ensure your comments are included. The survey closes April 22, 2007.
http://www.econsultation.mndm.gov.on.ca/takeSurvey.asp?surveyID=123
Please distribute within your organization and to your contacts. All feedback is welcomed.
Contact Information ....
Florence Bailey
Northern Development Officer
Coordinator, Northwest -- Northern Development Council
Ministry of Northern Development & Mines
62 Queen Street, Box 147
Sioux Lookout, ON P8T 1A2
(807)737-1616
(807)737-3419 fax
(807)737-6692 cell
florence.bailey@ontario.ca
www.mndm.gov.on.ca
INAC press release ...
INAC announces more than $46 million in Infrastructure at Pikangikum First Nation
OTTAWA, April 10 /CNW Telbec/ - The Honourable Jim Prentice, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians, today announced in a visit to the community more than $46 million to improve infrastructure at Pikangikum First Nation.
"Canada's New Government is pleased to invest in improving living conditions at Pikangikum First Nation. We are committed to assisting the First Nation in its efforts to become a healthier, and more sustainable community."
Canada's New Government through the Regional Major Capital Plan for Ontario of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC), has identified close to $41 million over five years (2007-2008 through 2011-2012), to address infrastructure issues at Pikangikum. These include:
Prior to this five-year investment, INAC has also provided approximately $5.4 million in 2006-2007 to assist Pikangikum with improvements to community infrastructure, including:
Pikangikum First Nation is located approximately 90 kilometres north of Red Lake, Ontario, and approximately 80 kilometres east of the Ontario-Manitoba border It has close to 2,100 members with 2,000 on reserve. The community is accessible year-round by air, and by ice road during the coldest months of winter.
This release is also available at: www.inac.gc.ca.
-30-
/For further information: Bill Rodgers, Director of Communications, Office of the Honourable Jim Prentice, (819) 997-0002; Greg Coleman, A/Director Executive Services and Communications, INAC Ontario Region, (416)973-2281; Media Relations, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, (819) 953-1160/
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Tories promise help for poorest native reserves
Tue Apr 10 - By Sue Bailey
OTTAWA (CP) - Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice says he will soon announce more plans to improve native housing as part of a focused effort to help Canada's poorest reserves.
The Conservatives nixed the former Liberal government's $5-billion Kelowna Accord, but Prentice said he will "get results" for aboriginal people where the Liberals failed.
"Certainly there is a need for housing, and there will be housing announcements in the days ahead."
Prentice spoke Tuesday during his first visit to Pikangikum, an Ontario reserve about 300 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg plagued by suicides where most residents lack indoor plumbing.
The Ojibwa community will receive $40 million over the next five years to connect it to the regional electrical grid, improve water and sewage services, and build up to 40 new houses and a new school.
Indian Affairs confirmed last December that just 43 of the reserve's 431 homes have running water or indoor toilets. About half the houses are literally falling apart and are overcrowded by a youthful and growing population of 2,200.
Many residents haul water in jugs from a water treatment plant or simply boil lake water to make it safe. In a scathing report last fall, a regional medical officer of health warned of a potentially disastrous outbreak of related disease.
Work to hook up houses to the water treatment plant was stalled in 2001 when the then-Liberal government took control of band finances, even though they were in order, citing the reserve's failure to deal with a bleak range of social problems.
A Federal Court judge later ruled in the band's favour.
Residents were told not to hang Christmas lights last year because an overworked diesel generator - Pikangikum's main power source - couldn't take the extra energy drain.
The reserve has long been a symbol of native poverty and despair, where suicide rates are among the world's highest.
Extending basic electricity to the community is top priority, Prentice said.
"That has actually been the critical impediment that has held this community back. They can't get on with the other things that need to be done because there's no electricity.
"We're going to start with that, get it done, then over the course of the next five years we've budgeted to improve the housing stock, build the school and do all the water and sewer connections. That's how we're going to approach these kinds of communities."
The spending announced Tuesday is not newly budgeted cash, but has been prioritized for Pikangikum based on urgent needs outlined by band leaders, Prentice said.
He has asked for a report from Indian Affairs on what happened to $7 million spent by the Liberals in a failed attempt to hook the reserve up to the power grid starting in 2000.
Furious chiefs attacked the Conservative budget for its limited new spending to lift native living standards, calling it the "stone soup budget."
But Prentice reiterated Tuesday that Ottawa's outlay for native programs is a "significant" amount that will top $10 billion this year.
"And in places such as Pikangikum where there are priority needs, we are moving to address them."
Amid graffiti-scrawled buildings and obvious hardship, Prentice said he was graciously received during a one-day trip to the reserve.
"There's an enormous amount of pride in the community."
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Feds to spend $40M for electricity, new school on troubled Pikangikum reserve
Sue Bailey, Canadian Press - April 09, 2007
OTTAWA (CP) - It may be more than three months late, but Christmas is coming to the troubled Pikangikum reserve.
The northern Ontario First Nation where residents were told not to hang Yuletide lights last year due to power shortages is to receive just over $40 million in new federal funds.
Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice will confirm the cash injection Tuesday, said a government official who asked not to be identified. It's to be announced as Prentice makes his first, day-long visit to the remote reserve about 300 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.
The money is to help connect houses to the regional electricity grid, improve water and sewage services, build a new school and up to 40 new homes.
Pikangikum has made global headlines for one of the world's highest suicide rates. Its rotting sprawl of run-down, graffiti-covered houses is a stark reminder that Third World poverty is a reality in Canada's most neglected native enclaves.
Many Pikangikum residents have no running water and rely on outhouses that freeze and overflow in winter. They draw electricity from an overworked diesel generator. About 700 children in the community of 2,200 are overcrowded into a school designed for 350. Organized recreation for a growing population of restless teenagers is badly needed.
They live in conditions that most Canadians can only imagine.
One of the most recent reports to leave the federal government red-faced was delivered last fall by a regional medical officer of health based in Kenora, Ont.
Dr. Pete Sarsfield raised alarms about water-related illness, skin diseases, ear infections and lice. He said the slow pace of federal action would never be accepted elsewhere.
"The conditions in Pikangikum would not be tolerated in our suburbs or rural areas," he told The Canadian Press last December. "It simply would not be allowed."
Angus Toulouse, Ontario vice-chief for the national Assembly of First Nations, said any new spending in the community is "tremendously needed" and long overdue.
Work to connect homes to the water treatment plant has been stalled since 2001, he noted. That's when the former Liberal government took over the band's finances - even though the books were in order - citing the band's failure to tackle an array of social problems, including domestic violence and a suicide rate that eclipsed the Canadian average.
"Just coming into the community, you can see the despair," he said in an interview.
"It's disgusting that in this day and age, that's the standard living condition in many of our impoverished communities - especially in the remote North. Out of sight, out of mind.
"I can only continue to express a real need for the government to take a global look at the needs that are there, and not individually zero in on one community."
Toulouse is cautiously optimistic that the $40 million may help take the edge off some of Pikangikum's most pressing infrastructure needs. But he said it won't be enough to keep pace with long neglected repairs, maintenance and the burgeoning demands of a growing population.
The Tyee - Reconciling with First Nations series
Award winning writer Sandra Shields reports on how Aboriginals and non-natives are working out new relationships -- and grappling with old injustices -- in classrooms, timber forests, and negotiating rooms of the Fraser Valley. Shields wanted to see how First Nations people in British Columbia might achieve a more just and equitable relationship with the descendents of their European colonizers.
She emerged from the process cautiously hopeful, sensing "a lightening" in relations, "at least provincially" - but at the same time saying, "This is really just the beginning."
"People who are experts in reconciliation talk about the need to be clear about what really happened, to find ways to address injustice, to root it out, to find ways of sharing power differently. That's generations of work," says Shields. "Thank god we are embarking on it, but there is a lot of work ahead of us and it will require an enduring commitment on all parts."
This special four part series is funded by a Tyee Fellowship for Solutions Reporting.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Beyond 'Teepees and Igloos' Reconciling with First Nations begins in the classroom.
Part 3:
Sharing the Forests - In new timber deals, what are First Nations really getting?
Series Background information:
Feds warned on native funding - Spending cap is eroding services, minister warned in pre-budget briefing document
Sun Apr 8 2007 - Paul Samyn - paul.samyn@freepress.mb.ca
OTTAWA -- Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice's department issued a pre-budget warning that a growing cash crunch for basic services is shortchanging the country's growing First Nations population.
Federal documents obtained by the Free Press show departmental officials red-flagged the long-term impact of a two-per-cent cap on funding increases that has resulted in less money for capital projects like schools, housing and welfare.
The tracking of the cumulative effect of the government's failure to keep up with both inflation and native population increases shows that funding for basic services is down six per cent in real terms from 1996 to 2006.
And that shortfall, the department says, comes with a price:
According to the department, maintaining a two-per-cent cap on funding increases results in a $50-million shortfall each year, whose cumulative impact is now more than $300 million less in real terms.
The warnings issued in November 2006 and February 2007 follow a secret memo to Prentice that was prepared for him when he took over the department after the Tory election win in 2006.
"Numerous policy and program pressures are beyond the capacity of the substantial $6-billion departmental budget which primarily funds provincial-type services for northerners and First Nations on-reserve communities,'' says the three-page briefing for Prentice.
Prentice has been under fire from aboriginal leaders in two successive budgets. The first Tory budget essentially gutted the $5.1-billion Kelowna accord for aboriginals, while natives barely merited a mention in the second budget with only $370 million in new spending over three years announced. Prentice's budget will rise by less than 0.6 per cent this year to $6.3 billion.
Prentice has repeatedly argued after the Mar. 19 budget that total government spending on aboriginals will top $10 billion this year -- which he says is $1 billion more than the Liberals ever spent.
Prentice spokeswoman Deirdra McCracken said the documents reflect a long-standing cap on funding increases that began while the Liberals were in power. But McCracken said more money will not solve the problems facing First Nations and that Prentice is looking at structural changes to improve their lives.
"What Minister Prentice has said from the beginning is that the solution to improving the lives of First Nations is not pouring more money into the top of the funnel," she said.
However, Liberal native affairs critic Anita Neville said Prentice is misleading Canadians by rolling in money spent on native land claims and other legal obligations to reach his $10 billion spending total.
Neville (Winnipeg South Centre) said the documents make clear the extent of the real problem facing First Nations, which Prentice is not prepared to admit to or take deal with.
"The bureaucracy is giving him the real picture and what he is doing is not responding,'' Neville said.
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Breaking down the numbers - HOW has Indian Affairs dealt with a two-per cent cap on funding increases?
Departmental documents show reallocation has been a key part of the coping strategy with the following basic services seeing the following cumulative reductions by 2005:
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Unrealistic funding cap hurting First Nations
Doug Cuthand, The StarPhoenix
Published: Friday, April 27, 2007
There is a "secret" document circulating that shows the federal government knew about the state of First Nations living conditions and budget shortfalls prior to its latest budget.
It warns the minister of Indian Affairs about the damage that a cap of two per cent on First Nations funding has created, including the serious cumulative impact it has on the health and safety of people. The internal department memo outlines the need to respond with a one-time payment of $500 million and an annual budget increase of $50 million thereafter.
Budget increases for Indian Affairs were limited to two per cent a year, starting in 1997. The rate of population and price increases has been four per cent annually for the same period. Indian Affairs receives an annual budget of about $6 billion, which, as the report points out, is four per cent of total federal expenditures.
As a result of the cap, certain statutory budget items that have grown in size have to be covered by diverting money from other areas. For example, tuition agreements with provincial schools increased $100 million in 2005. This is a statutory item that must be paid. But in order to pay this increase, money had to be taken from non-statutory items such as capital and housing spending.
The report also mentions that First Nations have coped with the shortfall by limiting growth in various areas, including staff salaries and benefits. Nothing was mentioned about the salaries and benefits of Indian Affairs staff. However, the report's appendices noted that First Nations' employees benefits are funded at 12.5 per cent, compared to 20 per cent for Indian Affairs employees.
The memo warns the minister that continuing with the cap is costly in terms of eroding on-reserve infrastructure, deteriorating health and safety of people, risking legal exposure and making it hard to maintain provincial standards.
Only 23 per cent of the budget spending is considered "discretionary" -- meaning the money can be allocated to other items. The bulk of the department's budget consists of "transfer payments," or money for provincial-type services such as child and family services and education.
Also considered discretionary and being cut back are "transformative programs" such as post-secondary education, housing and economic development, which are meant to improve socioeconomic disparities. This means that the department's budget is focused on basic maintenance, not development.
The report also notes that the department's northern affairs branch is unable to respond to pressures of economic growth and resource development.
There are funding pressures associated with "extraordinary" items such as the "Kashechewan emergency." In addition, over the past five years the department has had to reallocate funding to cover federal government priorities such as the environmental cleanup of contaminated sites.
The result of this cap on spending is that the budget is woefully inadequate to respond to the basic services First Nations communities require. The following is the result of reallocating funds: Capital is down $293 million, housing is down $81 million, income assistance is down $51million and post-secondary education is down $31 million.
This is a sad reflection of how some people are made to bear the brunt of funding cutbacks at a time of budget surpluses.
This report did not come from a group of disgruntled political leaders. It came from within the department, by the very bureaucrats who administer Indian programs. They know from the inside the sorry state of first Nations finances.
When the folks at the colonial office get worried, then First Nations know we are in real trouble.
The attachments to the report are dated Feb. 2, although the report itself isn't dated. Diedra McCracken, Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice's spin doctor, told me that this was an old document presented to Prentice when he took over the portfolio. If that's the case, two budgets have been presented without the minister responsible acting on advice from his officials.
In any event, the report's call for a one-time increase of $500 million and annual increases of $50 million were not followed. Instead, there was a miserly increase of $370 million in new money, which is to be spent over three years. There was $300 million for a housing trust, but even its administration is yet to be worked out. This was a bright spot in the budget and a welcome change from band-owned housing.
Prentice was running around the hinterlands this month, generously announcing money for capital projects. Among the announcements was $14.5 million for Saskatchewan alone. In light of the fact that close to $300 million was taken from capital spending last year, it appears that Prentice was bribing us with money we rightfully should have got in 2006.
Most of the funding went into constituencies held by opposition MPs. Strange, that. Maybe it's starting to dawn on the government that the aboriginal vote means something.
But this issue cannot be dismissed as merely partisan. The cap was put in place under the Liberals and continued by the Conservatives. Both have some explaining to do.
We have First Nations in debt and under-funded today. It's time to take a serious look at providing adequate funding for First Nations and not place us in a position where our leaders have to beg for basic services.
Press Release ...
Manitoba Chiefs Respond to Prentice's Threats
"Indian Affairs Minister Threatens Forensic Audits if First Nations Speak Out"
Winnipeg, MB-Grand Chief Ron Evans of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs spoke today at a press conference in response to Indian Affairs minister Jim Prentice, who wrote to the media threatening First Nations with forensic audits if they publicly and legally expressed concern over the Federal Budget.
"We thought freedom of speech was a right all Canadians enjoyed. According to this government, we were wrong," said Evans.
Evans said that the First Nations in Manitoba are appalled with the recent federal budget which not only excluded First Nations but ignored the Kelowna Accord of 2005 completely.
He pointed out that despite meeting with every level of government, and reaching agreements with governments and lawmakers, governments continually ignore their own agreements.
Evans said that "on Kelowna, not only did we all agree but Brian Mulroney, Steven Harper's advisor, is in full support of the accord. He's the one that said 'We've existed for 140 years and we have this shameful situation… and why? Very simple: we stole their land.'"
The Grand Chief announced that he called an emergency Executive Council of Chiefs yesterday and that due to the serious nature of the federal budget, the meeting was opened to all First Nation Chiefs and Councils from the 64 First Nation communities in Manitoba.
The meeting, held at Winnipeg's Radisson hotel, was called on short notice. Attendance was strong, despite the fact that many who came had to take expensive flights due to the lack of winter roads this late in the year.
At the meeting, the Chiefs of Manitoba talked about the fact that the spotlight is now on Manitoba as it was them that Prentice threatened directly in his letter to the media. "With First Nations groups across the country watching to see what will do, Manitoba Chiefs must take the lead," said Evans.
Under the direction of its Executive Council of Chiefs, Evans announced that he as Grand Chief would be implementing the following:
Evans also pointed out that in Minister Prentice's letter to the media (Winnipeg Free Press, March 29, 2007), he said he would be willing to sit down and talk with AMC representatives. Evans said he invited the Minister to do so in a letter on March 22 but got no response. Evans said he will invite him once again to an AMC Special Assembly in Sioux Valley on May 8-10, 2007. Evans added that the Executive Council also directed that the AMC look at ways to make the government accountable for treaty compliance for Manitoba bands by using its own forensic auditing system.
Evans wrapped up his comments by adding that "freedom of speech and the tradition of civil disobedience are peaceful responses to the government from its people. We are lawfully doing our part. When will the government do the same?"
Nakina Sankar
Director of Corporate Communications
Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs
204-799-6493
nsankar@manitobachiefs.com.
Press release ...
imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival Call for Submissions
The imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival is an international festival that celebrates the latest works by Indigenous peoples on the forefront of innovation in film, video, radio, and new media. We are currently seeking features, shorts, documentaries, dramas, comedies, animation by international and Canadian Indigenous filmmakers and producers. We invite all genres and lengths and encourage submissions from first-time and emerging directors.
We are also seeking radio programming and new media works made by Indigenous producers and artists. Radio and new media submissions are presented at a Mediatheque centre during the festival.
National chief says day of action should build bridges, not blockades
April 5, 2007 - Canadian Press: SUE BAILEY
OTTAWA (CP) - Canada's top native leader is calling for cool heads and peaceful demonstrations - not blockades - as frustrated chiefs plan a national day of action for June 29.
The point is to draw public support rather than alienate it, says Phil Fontaine, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN). "This day is intended to bring focus to the issues facing our communities and to generate greater awareness, understanding and support for the need to act.
"Through peaceful demonstrations across the country, we will reach out to Canadians by putting our issues and our solutions front and centre," he said Thursday in a statement.
It comes as some chiefs are calling for the swift, if contentious, impact of blocked rail lines. Such tactics can backfire.
"Let's face it: if you irritate Canadians, they're not going to listen to your message," says Bryan Hendry, a spokesman for Fontaine.
"To be absolutely clear, the AFN is advocating peaceful demonstrations," he said in an interview. "We're telling people we don't want any blockades. They're not the answer."
Still, AFN chiefs voted last December for the national day of action as part of a resolution moved by Terrance Nelson, chief of the Roseau River Anishinabe First Nation in Manitoba. The resolution clearly calls for a 24-hour railway blockade (from 4 p.m. next June 29 to 4 p.m. June 30) "to reaffirm the need for the Canadian government to establish a reasonable time-frame for settlement of Indigenous rights."
The document also cites letters written by Canadian National and Canadian Pacific railway officials, "asking Canada to settle matters with Indigenous people so as to maintain the viability of their businesses."
Nelson has called for an emergency meeting of chiefs to discuss railway blockades this summer.
Fontaine's appeal for calm comes on the heels of a rhetorical sparring match between the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice.
The exchange erupted as furious chiefs, including Fontaine, blasted what some have called the Conservative "stone soup budget" - so named because it all but excludes new funds to fight native poverty.
Manitoba Grand Chief Ron Evans responded by threatening to stall provincial hydro dams and other government projects. In turn, Prentice threatened funding cuts and forensic audits if tax dollars are used "in planning illegal and disruptive blockades."
The Indian Affairs minister cites spending in the budget for native housing, children and families, education and training.
Chiefs say it's not nearly enough to "put the wheels on Kelowna" as Prentice promised to do after the Conservatives nixed the $5-billion Kelowna accord reached by the former Liberal government, native leaders and the premiers.
A day of rail blockades to protest native poverty last summer was averted. Canadian National Railway agreed to write to Ottawa, urging quicker action to settle land claims.
The federal budget last month says the Conservatives will work with chiefs to "move forward an action plan" in the next year to speed up specific claims. No timelines for actual compensation were given.
Native chiefs blame unfulfilled treaties and frequent exclusion from the harvesting of lucrative natural resources as prime causes of poverty.
© The Canadian Press, 2007