The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Metis community gets bigger with $1.6M land purchase

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The tiny northern Alberta community of Fort McKay is planning on getting a lot bigger after buying $1.6 million in land from the Alberta government.

The Metis community, on the Athabasca River just north of Fort McMurray, is home to about 750 people and sits among many oilsands sites.

It is believed to be the first Metis settlement to buy all the land it occupies from a provincial government.

“This is nothing less than the realizatio­n of Louis Riel’s vision for his people — that we have a land base, a home that is truly ours,” Fort McKay Metis president Ron Quintal said in a release Wednesday.

“Now that we have land, we can proceed with an aggressive economic developmen­t plan to leverage the land into businesses, careers, housing and long-term prosperity for our people.”

The Fort McKay Metis initially leased the largely undevelope­d land from the Alberta government in 2007 to use for housing. Seven years later, the group bought almost 49 hectares and now the deal for the remaining 150 hectares is complete.

“This is the start of genuine and tangible self-determinat­ion for our community,” Quintal said.

“This land transactio­n goes hand and hand with a decision by the community members to move toward developing a selfgovern­ment model and our own community constituti­on. Our goal? Self-government.”

The community is planning more housing, high-density apartments, a gas station with a car wash and a Tim Hortons, a healing lodge, a cultural pavilion and a municipal firehall.

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