Tag Archives: Opaskwayak Cree Nation

Cree, Métis Trappers And Fishermen Block Highway In Northern Manitoba

Cree trappers and fishermen from the Opaskwayak Cree Nation near The Pas, Man., stop a truck on Highway 6 as part of a blockade that began Aug. 30. (Thomas Monias)

Cree trappers and fishermen from the Opaskwayak Cree Nation near The Pas, Man., stop a truck on Highway 6 as part of a blockade that began Aug. 30. (Thomas Monias)

After negotiations over hydro development stall, groups block highway to protest

By Tim Fontaine, CBC News Posted: Sep 02, 2016

Around a dozen people from the Opaskwayak Cree Nation and their supporters have erected a blockade on a major highway in northern Manitoba, stopping trucks and equipment bound for a massive hydroelectric development project.

The blockade, which began Tuesday, is at the junction of Highway 6 and Highway 39 just south of Wabowden, Man. approximately 600 kilometres north of Winnipeg.

The protesters are allowing cars, trucks and bus traffic through, but they claim to have turned back semi-trailers and equipment that were en route to the construction site of Manitoba Hydro’s Keeyask Generating Station near Gillam, Man., a further 500 kilometres north.

The protesters are mainly members of the Opaskawayak Cree Nation Local Fur Council and the Opaskawayak Commercial Fishery Co-op, two groups that have been attempting to negotiate a settlement related to the construction of the Grand Rapids Generating Station over five decades ago.

They’ve also been joined by people from the Misipawistik Cree Nation and Métis from Grand Rapids, Man.

“This is for land that was damaged in 1960 — 1.5 million acres of prime trapping and fishing area, when Hydro built the Grand Rapids hydro generating station,” said John Morrisseau, who is from Grand Rapids.

The fight for compensation

HYDRO-NATIVE-DEAL

Construction of the Grand Rapids Generating Station began in 1960 and lasted five years, but destroyed thousands of kilometres of Cree territory, protesters say. (Winnipeg Free Press/CP)

Construction of the Grand Rapids generating station began in 1960 and lasted five years until it was operational.

The dam, which was built on the Saskatchewan River, required thousands of kilometres of land to be flooded — much of it trapping and fishing grounds used by First Nations, including people from Opaskwayak Cree Nation.

The trappers and fishermen from that community say that because of the changed landscape they now have to travel up to 150 kilometres just to fish or reach their traplines. Because of that, some people lost their livelihoods altogether, they say.

Several of the First Nations and Métis people affected by the dam have already negotiated settlements with the province and Manitoba Hydro. But for the past nine years, trapping and fishing groups from the Opaskwayak Cree Nation have been trying negotiate their own compensation.

Those talks broke down around two weeks ago.

“We’ll stay here as long as it takes to get Hydro at the negotiating table,” Morrisseau said.

Hydro responds

But a spokesperson for Manitoba Hydro said it was the trappers and fishermen who walked away from the negotiating table in the first place.

“[Manitoba Hydro] is more than happy to talk to them but I want to be very, very clear that they were the ones who walked away from the negotiating table, not us,” said Scott Powell.

“We’ve even offered to bring in a mediator at our expense to help with the discussions.”

According to Powell, there’s a dispute over how many fishers and trappers are eligible for compensation. Hydro is willing to compensate 59 fishers and more than 150 trappers, based on how many were harvesting in the area at the time the dam was built, but the First Nations say hundreds more should be eligible.

CBC News has been trying to reach the heads of both the Opaskwayak Cree Nation Local Fur Council and the Opaskwayak Commercial Fishery Co-op for further comment, but cellphone coverage is poor in the area where the blockade is set up.

Powell confirmed that several trucks on contract with Manitoba Hydro that were headed to “points north” had been stopped and turned back by the blockade.

RCMP didn’t respond to requests from CBC News for information about the situation but Canada Carthage, a major trucking company, has been warning drivers and operators about the blockade on social media.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/aboriginal/cree-trappers-blockade-manitoba-hydro-1.3746010?cmp=abfb

Youth From Opaskwayak Cree Nation Shine Light On Suicide Epidemic In New Documentary

Still from the documentary The Secrets of the Bignell Bridge, which looks at the suicide epidemic impacting youth in Opaskwayak Cree Nation, Man. (Courtesy of Nu-Media)

Still from the documentary The Secrets of the Bignell Bridge, which looks at the suicide epidemic impacting youth in Opaskwayak Cree Nation, Man. (Courtesy of Nu-Media)

The youth ‘wanted to speak their truth,’ says Nu-Media president Jordan Molaro

CBC News | August 12, 2016

A new documentary created by youth from Opaskwayak Cree Nation is shining a light on the suicide epidemic in their home community.

The documentary was created in collaboration with Nu-Media, a production company from Winnipeg that tours First Nations to introduce Indigenous youth to film production.

“When we walk into a community, we don’t have any idea what we’re going to film, because we’re just the conduits. We just have the tools, we know how to use them,” said Jordan Molaro, president from Nu-Media.

The Secrets Behind The Bignell Bridge from Nu-Media onVimeo.

Molaro thought that when they went to OCN, the youth would want to make a lighthearted film – maybe a zombie or vampire story – but was surprised to find out they wanted to make a documentary about suicide.

“They wanted to speak their truth, they said that they were hurting themselves and that they were dying,” said Molaro.

Molaro says the youth were very courageous to make a film about such a dark topic, and they bring a unique perspective on the issue that Canadians haven’t yet seen.

“I think a lot of Canadians really don’t understand what is happening in our communities, and when we see stories that are shared, even on the CBC, we aren’t seeing it from the perspective of the youth,” said Molaro.

“We’ve never asked the youth what they truly want to do, we’ve never really asked them what they actually need, and they’re saying what we need to do is to just talk – because that doesn’t cost a thing.”

Molaro says that over the last year, there has been about 40 suicides in Opaskwayak Cree Nation. And since releasing the film this week, one more youth has ended their life.

Film premiere at Edmonton festival 

This fall the film will have its official Canadian premiere at Dreamspeakers Film Festival in Edmonton.

In October, Nu-Media will be holding a three-month Indigenous film internship in Winnipeg. The program is open to Indigenous youth ages 18-35 years, who are currently unemployed and living on reserve. The program is accepting 15 applicants, and Molaro plans to accept at least five youth from Opaskwayak Cree Nation.

http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/aboriginal/opaskwayak-cree-nation-youth-shine-light-on-suicide-epidemic-in-doc-1.3719249