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Davis Inlet kids go to Sango Bay

Page 1

After six months of addiction counselling the Davis Inlet children have gone home. But not to Davis Inlet.

The 17 youths, who were flown to the Poundmaker's lodge in Alberta for intensive solvent addiction therapy and sexual abuse counselling, landed at the Inlet for a community homecoming Sept. 2.

But soon they will be moving to a wilderness camp at Sango Bay, 15 km away on the mainland, where Innu leaders eventually want to relocate the community.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.

Sechelt thriving under self-government

Page 12

The sun is shining on a beautiful, warm August day in this picturesque resort town on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast, home of the only Native band in B.C., and one of a handful in Canada, that has self-government.

The salmon are jumping in the Pacific Ocean as they return to spawn at the hatchery on Sechelt Nation lands, which hug the western shore of the B.C. mainland, accessible only a 40-minute ferry ride from Vancouver.