Satellite view

B.C. pays Blueberry River First Nations $65 million as 195 projects approved before court victory proceed

By Matt Simmons, The Narwhal, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

Blueberry River First Nations signed an agreement with British Columbia Thursday, outlining first steps toward healing  the land and restoring the nations’ ability to exercise its Treaty 8  Rights, which the province breached by permitting and encouraging  industrial development on a vast scale, according to a B.C. Supreme Court ruling in June.

“It’s long overdue,” Chief Marvin Yahey  told The Narwhal in an interview. “For the past 50 years, industrial  development has totally wiped out all our traditional lands, our cabins  and our trails … and also the wildlife.”

Maegen Giltrow, legal counsel for Blueberry River First Nations, said the speed at which this agreement  was finalized is an indication of the weight of the court ruling.

“We’ve never seen an order like this  before,” she said in an interview. “The province has a real sense of  urgency here, because the order is very real.”

The agreement includes a provincial commitment to provide $65 million in funding to Blueberry River First Nations  for habitat restoration and cultural initiatives in the nation’s 38,300  square kilometres of territory. Projects include land, river, wetland,  road and seismic line restoration. 

As The Narwhal recently reported,  Blueberry territory is fragmented by more than 110,000 linear  kilometres of roads, pipelines and transmission and seismic lines. The  funding is also aimed at supporting Blueberry River First Nations  cultural restoration, such as education, language and development of  traplines, cabins and trails.

“It’s been something that the Elders speak of, of healing the land, long ago,” Yahey said. “How they explained it  was: we’re going to be living in a desert in the not-so-distant future  if you do not get involved and handle this.” 

He said the agreement, while long overdue, is welcome and charts a path toward healing.

“I’m very excited to be part of it, and  that our people are going to be on the ground, rolling up their sleeves,  and part of this,” he said. “This gives us a chance to get to be out on  the land, and to make sure and help restore that balance the ecosystem  once had.”

The province is taking a hands-off approach to the allocation of the funds, as noted in a statement released following the signing of the agreement. 

“The Blueberry River First Nations  government will establish its own decision-making structure with respect  to the utilization of the restoration funds, priorities for restoration  and for methodology and allocation of funding,” the statement said.  “The province will participate in this structure, in a non-decision  making role, to ensure that region-wide restoration activities are  co-ordinated.”

The agreement allows 195 forestry and oil  and gas projects to proceed because they were already approved prior to  the court decision. This is consistent with the court ruling, which  noted, “Blueberry seeks to stop future authorizations, but not to quash  or undo existing ones.” However, 20 approved projects have been paused  pending further negotiations as they are situated in areas of cultural  and ecological importance. 

It is uncertain if the Site C dam  hydro project, which is located within the territory of the Blueberry  River First Nation, will be affected by the court ruling. In its recent  quarterly progress report, BC Hydro noted that it “continues to consult  with Blueberry River First Nations and all Treaty 8 Nations and remains  open to negotiating an Impact Benefit Agreement with Blueberry River  First Nations.”

The report also noted that “although BC  Hydro believes that the Blueberry decision should not affect the  issuance of permits because the project is approved and under  construction, there remains the possibility that the timing of the  issuance of provincial permits required for the completion of the  project may be affected.” 

“The 20 [projects] were in particularly  sensitive cultural areas,” Giltrow said. She was unable to disclose  specifics of the authorizations on hold but told The Narwhal they are a  mix of forestry and oil and gas projects. “Blueberry let B.C. know that  there was real concern about these outstanding permits and something  needed to be addressed about them. So that’s where good faith discussion  and compromise can produce something like this first step initial  agreement today.”

Court decision ‘foundation of the deal with Treaty 8’

Murray Rankin, Minister of Indigenous  Relations and Reconciliation, said in a press conference the province  has started discussions with other Treaty 8 Nations, which include Doig  River, Fort Nelson, Halfway River, McLeod Lake, Prophet River, Saulteau  and West Moberly.

“We’ll be engaging closely with other  Treaty 8 Nations all along the way to ensure they’re also part of this  important work, work to heal the land, work to restore the health of  wildlife and improved land management and permitting processes on Treaty  8 territory,” Rankin said.

“What’s so important about the [court]  decision is it recognizes that this is the foundation of the deal with  Treaty 8,” Giltrow said. “The whole idea was, ‘You’ve got your way of  life and we’re not taking anything away from that. You will allow some  peaceful settlement to come into the territory, and you will only  benefit from that.’ ”

The distinction is important, she said, because it doesn’t preclude economic gain, nor industrial development. 

“Treaty 8 made sure that there was room  for both, and it requires maintaining a healthy environment so the  Indigenous way of life can continue to prosper.”

Rankin acknowledged that need to find balance.

“It’s critically important to maintain a  strong economy in this region for everyone who lives there,” he said.  “And that is something that we will do together.”

The implications of the court decision  beyond Treaty 8 territories remains to be seen but Giltrow said the  nature of the ruling will have impacts across the province. 

“The province’s cumulative effects  management regime, writ large, was put on trial in this trial and found  to be, as the judge put it, seriously wanting.”

Top photo credit: Satellite view of some traditional territory of Blueberry First Nation – Courtesy Google Maps

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