National Post

First Nation opposes non-native resort

WHITE BAND MEMBER, OTTAWA, DEVELOPER ARE PLAYERS IN B.C. DEVELOPMEN­T BATTLE

- Brian Hutchinson National Post bhutchinso­n@nationalpo­st.com

With fewer than 400 members and a reserve t hat covers j ust 458 hectares, t he Soowahlie First Nation ( SFN) is small. But it’s beautifull­y situated south of Chilliwack, B.C., next to a provincial park and Cultus Lake, a popular summer resort area packed with attraction­s, including a waterpark, a golf course and a children’s theme park called Dinotown.

The band has enjoyed good relations with its neighbours, but there have been rough patches, too. Last summer, some SFN members charged motorists $ 20 each to drive across their reserve, after a storm closed a public road.

That didn’t go over well; while SFN chief and band manager Brenda Wallace says the incident demonstrat­ed “how we want our privacy and don’t like our space invaded,” she also expressed regret that it happened.

Now this: a fight over real estate, power and race.

There are only 70 houses on the SFN reserve. There will soon be hundreds more, should a 74- year- old white band member, a local property developer and Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada ( INAC) have their way.

Up to 250 vacation- style homes are planned for an 11- hectare chunk of prime Soowahlie land, on the edge of the reserve, near the coveted lake. But the new homes aren’t meant for band members; they will be marketed to affluent retirees, empty-nesters, non-natives.

Lynn Commodore, t he 74- year- old, stands to gain $ 4 million in a pre- paid, 99- year lease agreement on reserve land she controls, but doesn’t actually own. Ottawa, via INAC, is still in charge, after all.

The band allotted Commodore and her aboriginal husband Earl a “certificat­e of possession” on t he 11 hectares, back in 1972. Certificat­es of possession are instrument­s used by bands across Canada to allocate reserve lands to members for their own use and benefit, subject to INAC approval.

The Commodores built and operated a go- kart concession on t he property for seven years. They also worked with a developer to propose a housing scheme, which SFN members eventually turned down.

Another developer, Chilliwack- based Larry Les, subsequent­ly joined forces with the Commodores. Earl Commodore died two years ago, but the housing developmen­t proposal proceeded.

Not everyone is thrilled. Wallace says Commodore has every right to pursue the developmen­t; her beef is with INAC.

Department bureaucrat­s “are telling us this is going to happen, whether we like it or not,” she said. “Some of us aren’t really looking forward to having 250 new neighbours.”

INAC’s “paternalis­tic activities threaten to create and foster long- term social impacts” on her community. They trump any potential economic benefits a developmen­t deal would bring the band.

SFN members would rather keep their reserve to themselves than share 11 hectares with non- natives, even if it means turning their backs on $400,000 in annual property tax revenues and a one- time cash payment of about $1 million, all terms of the proposed developmen­t.

Les thinks they should reconsider. He says he’s offering the band a solid deal, noting the SFN “isn’t the wealthiest band right now.”

But a community meeting this month failed to convince band members. INAC officials were shouted down and Les was unable to complete his presentati­on.

“The result of the meeting is the clear message that the community does not support the housing developmen­t,” Wallace said t his week in a press release.

“If I NAC and t he developer had their way, constructi­on would already be underway despite the clear objections voiced by t he Soowahlie leadership and citizens.”

Some were more forceful. They include Doug Kelly, an outspoken SFN member and grand chief of the Sto: lo Tribal Council, a group that represents local bands.

After the March 11 community meeting, he launched into attack mode.

“Larry Les, he didn’t get a very warm reception,” he told the Chilliwack Times newspaper. “He talked down to us like we’re a bunch of dumb Indians.”

Kelly also went after Commodore. A “non- aboriginal person that acquired ( Indigenous) s t at us under racist provisions of the Indian Act should not reap economic benefits intended for Soowahlie members,” he said.

A Commodore relative who asked not to be identified accuses Kelly of bullying and says all four of her children — each of them a full SFN member — are “100-percent for the developmen­t.”

I NAC did not answer specific questions about the brouhaha this week.

“We are following up with Chief and Council to identify their specific concerns for department­al considerat­ion, and will also follow up with ( Lynn Commodore) before making a formal decision on the lease developmen­t,” a spokespers­on said via email.

Ottawa knows best, in other words, and will have the final say, come what may.

HE TALKED DOWN TO US LIKE WE’RE A BUNCH OF DUMB INDIANS.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Tribal council chief Doug Kelly has come out against a housing developmen­t
for non-natives at Soowahlie First Nation near Chilliwack, B.C.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Tribal council chief Doug Kelly has come out against a housing developmen­t for non-natives at Soowahlie First Nation near Chilliwack, B.C.

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