Tag Archives: Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs

First Nations Leaders Say It’s Back To Barricades If They Don’t Get A Deal With Christy Clark

From left to right, Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, president of the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, Grand Chief Edward John and British Columbia Premier Christy Clark listen during a gathering with cabinet ministers and First Nations leaders in Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday September 11, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck ORG XMIT: VCRD108

From left to right, Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, president of the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, Grand Chief Edward John and British Columbia Premier Christy Clark listen during a gathering with cabinet ministers and First Nations leaders in Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday September 11, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS

By Dirk Meissner / The Canadian Press

B.C. Premier Christy Clark is expected to try and bridge the chasm that separates her government and the leaders of the province’s First Nations at a meeting in Vancouver today.

About 500 First Nations leaders are meeting with Clark and members of her cabinet again today with the aim of signing a joint government-First Nations working agreement.

But the chasm that separates her government and First Nations was clearly defined yesterday when talks got underway at a Vancouver hotel for the second annual all-chiefs meetings.

While B.C.’s Aboriginal Relations Minister John Rustad said there has been remarkable achievements on economic and social fronts with First Nations, Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, said they’re giving the government a one-year deadline to negotiate a reconciliation deal.

“The underlying message is if we don’t make any progress within the space of the next year, I would suggest all of this will fall through and it will be back to the courts and pretty much back to the barricades,” said Phillip.

Landmark ruling

Last year’s landmark Supreme Court of Canada decision that granted the Tsilhqot’in Nation aboriginal title to 1,700 square kilometres of land in B.C.’s Nemiah Valley remains the driving force behind the reconciliation initiative prompted by Clark and First Nations leaders.

The decision is the first in Canadian history where aboriginals have been granted title to land they claimed as their own. Tsilhqot’in Chief Roger William said the ruling gives First Nations a legal tool to use as leverage in negotiations with governments and resource developers.

Legal scholars and political experts have suggested the ruling gives aboriginals massive powers on land-use issues, especially resource development. B.C. First Nations are seeking government support for aboriginal rights and title to lands, which also includes revenue sharing.

Phillip said all involved must have the courage to move forward, build consensus and silence those who predict Armageddon if First Nations are given an equal voice in building and sharing B.C.’s economic future.

Clark has said ignoring the Supreme Court ruling puts B.C.’s future in peril, prompting her to meet with the chiefs and councillors from B.C.’s more than 200 First Nations.

Phillip said chiefs left last year’s meeting disappointed because the province did not adopt a four-point statement that established government support for their rights and title to lands.

“The last time we couldn’t even agree on a public statement,” said Phillip, adding when it comes to reconciliation B.C. is at “strike two.”

“We need a legislative framework and a policy framework we can rely on that allows us to reconcile aboriginal title rights interests and other Crown and industry interests. We don’t have that.”

Phillip said the economy of B.C. hangs in the balance and all parties are aware of the gravity of the situation.

Rustad said the provincial government’s relations with First Nations over the last decade on numerous economic and social fronts have been ground-breaking.

The handful of First Nations who have negotiated land-claims treaties have produced spectacular results, but the process takes too long, he said.

“We need to be able to find a way to do this in a much more expedited manner.”

While much of the conference is closed to the media, Clark is expected to make a public address before the chiefs on Thursday.

Source: http://fw.to/gQ0XAfX

Chiefs Demand Investigation Into Death Of Aboriginal Teen In Vancouver’s DTES

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs. (Postmedia Network)

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs. (Postmedia Network)

By Red Power Media, Staff

The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs is demanding police investigate the government agencies whose alleged inaction led to the overdose death of an aboriginal teenager in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (DTES).

Union President Grand Chief Stewart Phillip says workers in health care, education, policing and community agencies may have broken the law by repeatedly failing to report that Paige needed protection.

Provincial legislation states that failure to inform the government of a child needing protection is punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 and six months in jail.

Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer says that an investigation into Paige’s death is necessary and that it should be conducted at arm’s length by the RCMP.

Paige was only 19 years old when she died in Vancouver's notorious downtown eastside

Paige was only 19 years old when she died in Vancouver’s notorious downtown eastside

Paige was born to a 16-year-old mother in Kamloops.

At 16, Paige and her mother moved to Vancouver’s DTES. At that point, the total amount of moves her mother made was around 84. Paige would go on to move an additional 50 times before her death.

Paige died of a drug overdose in a public washroom near Oppenheimer Park in the DTES at 19-years-old. Her mother died 18-months later.

All of Paige's moves in a span of three years

                              All of Paige’s moves in a span of three years

A report released earlier this year by B.C.’s Representative for Children and Youth slammed the province.

In the lengthy report documenting Paige’s plight, a critic says apathy, incomplete reports and inaction from ministry workers were significant contributors to her continual homelessness and eventual death.

The Representative for Children and Youth Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafonde submitted a 50-page report “Paige’s Story: Abuse, Indifference and a Young Life Discarded,” to the legislative assembly of B.C. and hopes staff working in several ministry agencies will use it to change approaches towards children, particularly aboriginal children, navigating the system designed to protect them.

Paige’s story reveals the massive gap between understanding of the effects of trauma and the systems at the front line — the social workers, police, school staff and health care providers. Professional standards of care were not upheld in how Paige was treated, the report says.

The report raises intense concerns about the professional judgment of those in the system. Paige’s suffering is detailed in the report and it will sicken every reader to know that this happened in Vancouver’s DTES, under the watchful lens of a social services system that should have done better.