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Top News - January - 2003

Published January 20, 2003

Happy New Year!

Photo by Yvonne Irene Gladue

Deal to allow Aboriginal participation in boom

Treaty groups celebrate the realization of a dream

Television for Métis people

This is only a partial listing of the stories featured in the January 2003 issue of Alberta Sweetgrass. If you are not receiving your own copy of Sweetgrass, then you have missed out on a lot.


Deal to allow Aboriginal participation in boom

Sweetgrass Staff, Fort McMurray

The minister of Indian Affairs was the featured guest at a gala dinner at Fort McMurray's Sawridge Hotel on Jan. 9 as an agreement involving five First Nations, the private sector and the federal government was celebrated.

The Athabasca Tribal Council (ATC) All Parties Core Agreement took effect several days earlier at the beginning of the year. It will see 15 oil and forestry companies continue an economic development agreement that helps the ATC member communities play in increasing role in the economic boom that has transformed the northern Alberta city. It's expected that $50 billion worth of investment will flow into the Fort McMurray region in the next 12 years as a massive deposit of oil is extracted from the sandy soil in the area. Along with the money will come unprecedented employment opportunities.

Robert Nault, the minister of Indian and Northern Affairs, revealed his department's contribution to the agreement. Saying, "there is no such thing as social justice without economic justice," the minister congratulated the parties for working out a way to include First Nations in the region's prosperity.

Nault said his department will contribute $1.2 million to help the parties continue to work together.

Indian and Northern Affairs Canada will also contribute $1.5 million to assist the Fort McKay First Nation in expanding its long-term economic development opportunities. In partnership with the private sector, the Fort McKay First Nation is planning to establish an industrial and commercial centre in northeastern Alberta for companies servicing the oil sands industry. Strategically located 60 km north of Fort McMurray, in the geographic centre of the oils sands development, the industrial park will take advantage of an estimated $1.5 billion in new investment this year by the petroleum industry.

The federal funding, part of a total $3.4 million project, will be used to provide infrastructure such as electricity, natural gas, telephone, high speed Internet and non-potable water to the industrial park. Fort McKay and other First Nations will operate businesses located in the park, providing them the opportunity to establish long-term relationships with private industry contracting goods and services to the oil sands on a one-on-one basis or in joint ventures.

The 38-hectare (80-acre) park will offer lease clients serviced industrial land in lots ranging between two to three hectares. The lot size can be reduced or enlarged to suit the needs of potential tenants. As there currently exist no industrial subdivision north of the city, this industrial park is an opportunity for Fort McKay First Nation to capitalize on a market niche to help meet the current needs of contractors and companies looking for industrial sites. The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, in which the City of Fort McMurray is located, has approved a new industrial category for this subdivision.

The federal funding will enable ATC to continue to participate as a member of the executive group and management committee. The group includes representatives of the major resource companies, ATC First Nations, federal, provincial and municipal governments to plan and support First Nations participation and benefits from the oil sands development, including training, education, employment, contracting and mitigating environmental issues.

"We really do have to create economic opportunities for Aboriginal people, particularly since there's such a young population," Nault said. "The Aboriginal labor force is by far the fastest growing in Canada. It's something like five times the national average. I'll remind those of you who are in industry, that's the labor force you have to focus your attention on. As a result of those statistics, First Nations people have the most opportunity to be some of the most important players in the economy in the next 50 years."

The minister said his department has increased the amount of money it spends of economic development from $25 million to $125 million in the last two years. That $125 million has been leverage to create $400 million in economic activity, he added.

"Last year in Alberta alone, an investment of $11 million in First Nation progress leveraged an additional $35 million in Alberta's economy for a total of nearly $50 million. That's nothing to sneeze at but at the same time I think we can still do better," he said.

Indian and Northern Affairs Canada's $1.2 million contribution to the core agreement continues a previous three year agreement that saw the federal government commit $750,000 to the tribal council.

The minister also announced a third federal commitment, a $300,000 investment in Mikisew Slings and Safety. The 100 per cent Mikisew Cree First Nation-owned company manufactures standard and custom fibre slings for heavy lifting purposes, Nault said. The company employs 17 full-time staff, 13 of whom are Aboriginal.

Chief Jim Boucher, president of the ATC, said he was proud of the progress his tribal council has made.

"Four ulcers and two heart attacks ago, we signed off on an agreement in 1999 that laid the foundation of today's agreement. The chiefs and I all got together and we talked about the state we were all in, in 1999, and we all agreed that we needed to do things different. We needed to change the attitudes in our communities with regards to economic development," he said. "We put forward a strategic plan. We wanted to enhance the development of our communities socially, politically, economically. We wanted to foster growth, prosperity and development through capacity building. We wanted to maintain and protect our treaty rights; we wanted also to protect our environment and relationship with Mother Earth. We wanted to work together in harmony and unity, supporting each other politically, socially and culturally. We put forward our vision to industry."

He said the ATC first came to an agreement with industry and then approached the federal government. The results are easy to see, he added. In 1999, there were 200 Aboriginal people in the workforce in the region. In 2002, that number increased to 1,200 people. Prior to the agreement First Nations did $90 million worth of business in the area. Last year, the total was more than $250 million.

"That's an indication of our strength, our success," Boucher said, proudly. "We've learned in the last three years to work together and we've been engaged for some time now in building a new relationship. We now have better relationships. We now have better agreements," he said. "The future for the Aboriginal people in this region is a bright future. It's a model for the rest of the country. It shows dedication and commitment by all parties who are involved to deliver results so that socially, economically, politically, culturally our communities can be healthier and more productive. I'm proud to be part of it."

Mike Ashar, executive vice-president of Suncor Energy, Inc., spoke on behalf of the companies.

"I don't want to seem self-congratulatory but I think we in the industry are pleased, and perhaps somewhat surprised, that such a diverse group of companies and personalities were somehow able to get around their competitive natures to somehow reach this level of co-operation," he said.

Ashar noted that of the 15 companies who signed the core agreement, six were new. He welcomed the new companies.

"We welcome your sense of responsibility and your commitment to this process. The entire region will benefit because of your added support," he said. "If this agreement says anything about industry, it says that we have come to recognize and understand the First Nations' goals and aspirations of re-establishing self-sufficiency, self-determination, health and prosperity in their communities. It says that we have come to know that co-operation is the key to successful, responsible and sustainable development. And it says that we cannot proceed with development in the absence of a clear and well-defined commitment of inclusion of the Aboriginal peoples of the Athabasca region."

Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo Mayor Doug Faulkner and Alberta Municipal Affairs Minister Guy Boutilier, a former Wood Buffalo mayor, were also present to congratulate the parties on the agreement.rested and really keen to learn the language," she said.

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Treaty groups celebrate the realization of a dream

Yvonne Irene Gladue, Sweetgrass Writer, Edmonton

The new Wingate Inn, a 106-room hotel located at 18220-100th Ave. in West Edmonton, is open for business. The hotel is 100 per cent owned by treaty groups 6, 7 and 8.

An official opening and blessing of the hotel was held on Jan. 2. The business offers meeting facilities for up to 200 people, an indoor pool, fitness centre, whirlpool and waterpark, deluxe breakfast buffet and shuttle service.

Don Morin, general manager of the Alberta Indian Investment Corporation, which is owned by the three treaty organizations, says that they are presently negotiating with various tenants on having a restaurant and lounge built adjacent to the property.

"From the sod turning ceremony till the opening today, the hardest thing about the whole deal was making sure that it was built on budget and on time. We got what we wanted from when we originally planned it. This is exciting to actually see this dream become a reality," he said.

The $8-million project, managed by Pacrim Hospitality Services, will create 35 full- and part-time jobs.

"A lot of hotels hire hotel management companies. Pacrim has hotel management expertise to assist us. I believe that out of the 35 positions, 85 per cent of them are filled by Aboriginal people and we have a First Nations general manager," he said.

Morin said that there will be First Nation and Aboriginal rates available at the hotel. Guests can show their status or Métis card when checking in.

"We will start at $84 a night if you show your card. That is a pretty decent rate for a nice room. By First Nations people seeing that it is owned by the three bands and staying there, they are actually investing in themselves. They do own a piece of it and the money will stay in the community."

Morin said that the First Nation's bands talked about owning a hotel in Edmonton for decades.
"We know that there are quite a few Aboriginal people who live in Edmonton. We did some research and the research confirmed that there are a lot of hotels that are used by First Nations people in Edmonton and being aware of that for years we realized that we were in a favorable position. So we decided to go after that market," he said.

"Hopefully this is the first step of many. I guess if it works, and I think it will, that this is the beginning for a lot of things. It is coming along. There are quite a few Aboriginal groups booking us right now for conferences and the chiefs are really starting to use us as well," he said.

Grand opening celebrations are scheduled for March.

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Television for Métis people

Cheryl Petten, Sweetgrass Writer, Regina

The Métis people of Canada will soon be able to turn on their televisions and see themselves, their history and their culture represented on the screen, when the Métis Michif Television Network (MMTN) hits the airwaves.

The new network was approved by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) on Nov. 6. Ken Schaffer, the main force behind the new network, is hoping to launch it in April 2004.

"I have been working toward this for 10 years of my life, minimum, just trying to get the quality and balance for the Métis people in films and video in television and broadcasting, and it has been a long road," Schaffer said.

Through Regina-based Metcom Productions Inc., Schaffer has been producing Metcom, the longest running television series in Canada about the Métis people, and the first in the country to do so. The show began airing on the Saskatchewan Communications Network in 1997, then was picked up by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN).

Schaffer sees the granting of the license for the MMTN as part of the evolution of broadcasting in Canada, explaining that each new network created in the country came into being because of the shortcomings of its predecessors. Radio-Canada, the French arm of the CBC, came into being because the CBC wasn't providing enough programming to meet the needs of the country's Francophone community, Schaffer said. Similarly, APTN was created because Aboriginal people weren't being adequately represented on the two CBC networks. And now, the MMTN is being launched because the Métis people aren't being adequately represented on the CBC or APTN.

"It's kind of like coming to the final step, because we are really the last group in the Constitution of Canada to really step forward to exercise our right to communicate on the same level as the French CBC, English CBC and APTN, and of course Northern Broadcasting," he said.

"In my opinion, Canada became truly Canada the day that they recognized us to have our own television network as one of the Indigenous peoples of Canada. Because we've never been able to really communicate with the rest of Canada," he said, pointing out that there currently are only three television shows being aired in Canada that deal specifically with Métis people.

"This is giving us a national voice to communicate with all Canadians," Schaffer said. "It's a wonderful thing."

Now that the license for the new network has been approved, Metcom will be concentrating on developing a budget, and working to get commitments from cable companies to carry the channel as part of their basic package. Schaffer is hoping people who want to watch the network will help out with the latter, by sending letters of support to Metcom, which they will then forward on to the cable companies.

Another area that Metcom will be focusing on is making sure it has something to put on the air when the network is launched, and that Métis people across the country are involved in the process.

"What this means is . . . thousands of careers will now be launched."

To do that, Metcom is partnering with the Gabriel Dumont Institute and Métis Employment Training of Saskatchewan Inc. (METSI) to develop and deliver a Métis specific film and video course that will be offered across the country.

"It's a short course, and it will allow people the ability to be able to step right up to the bat as producers, directors, camera people, and get involved and start working in the fld, if that's their choice," Schaffer said.

"This has been a dream for many little girls and boys, who have sat back and said, 'Why can't we do this?' And we can. That's the bottom line. Don't even go 'Why can't we?' anymore. We can. So it's a simple situation of trying to get everybody ready, be prepared. Those people who think they have an interest in it, I suggest they take the course."

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