The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Misguided course of action

Tsilhqot’in Nation decision and P.E.I. politics; loss in court will profoundly impact future developmen­t of P.E.I.

- BY PETER MCKENNA Peter McKenna is professor and chair of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

With a court date set for mid-January 2018, the legal showdown over the Mill River golf resort between the P.E.I. government and the Mi’kmaq chiefs is fast approachin­g. To be sure, both sides have a great deal at stake.

But it is the Wade MacLauchla­n government that has the most to lose - and lose it will. And that critical loss will profoundly impact the future developmen­t of this tiny province of P.E.I.

It will also have important ramificati­ons for the rest of the Maritimes. Since the Mi’kmaq of this region never extinguish­ed title to the land, any legal advances in P.E.I. will have a spillover effect for both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

So here’s a news flash for those who may not know: the people of this region reside in unceded Mi’kmaq territory. While Peace and Friendship Treaties were signed in the early 1700s, there are no comprehens­ive land treaties in Atlantic Canada - that is, the Mi’kmaq did not formally agree to relinquish ownership of the land as happened in other parts of Canada (i.e., via the so-called numbered treaties).

Ergo, Crown land in these parts is legally Mi’kmaq land — and that includes provincial­ly run golf courses and resorts, lands set aside for wind turbines and even the Charlottet­own Experiment­al Farm (federal) property in the city’s capital.

Accordingl­y, there is no way that the Mi’kmaq of this province can look the other way when it comes to the 325 acres of ancestral land in Mill River. Establishi­ng such a legal precedent would underscore any future Mi’kmaq claims to land in P.E.I. They absolutely have to make a stand here.

Notwithsta­nding the provincial government’s claim of proper consultati­on with the Mi’kmaq leadership, which is vigorously refuted by the chiefs, I can’t see why Premier MacLauchla­n is willing to undertake such a risky and misguided course of action.

Has no one in government been following recent legal jurisprude­nce in Canada? Have they not read the June 2014 Supreme Court of Canada landmark Tsilhqot’in Nation decision?

According to that legal ruling, Indigenous land in British Columbia, where title has not been extinguish­ed, still belongs to Indigenous peoples. Moreover, any future developmen­t on that land must have the consent (and not just holding consultati­ons) of the Indigenous owners of those ancestral lands.

The decision makes very clear the following: “This gives them the right to determine, subject to the interest of group title held for future generation­s, the uses to which the land is put and to enjoy its economic fruits.” And in a recent submission to the University of New Brunswick Law Journal on the Tsilhqot’in Nation decision, Robert Hamilton concluded that, “it is likely that title has yet to be extinguish­ed in (the Maritimes) and remains a legal interest where it can be proven to have existed.”

Furthermor­e, the Vancouverb­ased POLIS Water Sustainabi­lity Governance concluded in its legal brief on the subject: “Justificat­ion for interferen­ce with title can be achieved under exceptiona­l circumstan­ces only and must demonstrat­e that interferen­ce would only further reconcilia­tion.” And any justificat­ion for proceeding on unceded ancestral Aboriginal territory without Indigenous consent would not be sufficient — including a justificat­ion based on economic reasons.

It makes no sense, then, for the MacLauchla­n government to test the Tsilhqot’in precedent in court. Nor does it do anything to further reconcilia­tion with the First Peoples of this land.

So why is the provincial Liberal government of P.E.I. willing to risk so much? It seems clear that the government has a poor legal case. Are members of the provincial Liberal caucus aware of this highly reckless gambit?

Remember this: if the province loses the legal case, which is most likely, given past precedent, it will open up the possibilit­y of Mi’kmaq claims to watercours­es and other water sources in P.E.I. It could also see claims of Aboriginal title to all provincial and federal parkland in P.E.I.

More to the point, any potential resource developmen­t project going forward in P.E.I. Crown land would have to have the consent of the Mi’kmaq. And, most assuredly, no golf course on Crown land could be sold without the approval of the Mi’kmaq leadership.

Is this what the people Prince Edward Island want?

Here’s some free advice to the premier of P.E.I.: I would strongly advise you to work out an arrangemen­t with the Mi’kmaq before the Mill River case actually gets to court. There is far too much at stake here for the provincial government to simply roll the legal dice and inevitably lose badly. And that certainly would not bode well for the governing Liberals in the upcoming 2019 provincial election.

 ?? JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Premier Wade MacLauchla­n, centre, was joined by Chief Brian Francis of the Abegweit First Nation and Chief Matilda Ramjattan of Lennox Island First Nation in signing a developmen­t agreement between the government of P.E.I. and the Prince Edward Island...
JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN Premier Wade MacLauchla­n, centre, was joined by Chief Brian Francis of the Abegweit First Nation and Chief Matilda Ramjattan of Lennox Island First Nation in signing a developmen­t agreement between the government of P.E.I. and the Prince Edward Island...

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