The Province

First Nation buys land to fulfil its long-held dream

Displaced for decades, community finds permanent home on Vancouver Island

- DIRK MEISSNER

CAMPBELL RIVER — Thomas Smith says his most vivid memory of living on British Columbia’s Turnour Island was watching families leave their homes.

Five decades later, images of the exodus from the Indigenous village of Kalagwees are just as clear, he said.

“I was pretty young at the time,” 60-year-old Smith said. “I was one year at the primary school there and then the family moved.”

Jobs were scarce in the village, accessible only by boat or float plane, he said of his former home northeast of Vancouver Island in the Johnstone Strait. The community began to empty as the school closed and hospital-boat visits to the remote community were cancelled.

“The village went quiet,” Smith said. “There were a few adults living there but the majority of the families moved. Some went to Alert Bay, others moved to Campbell River and some even further to Vancouver, Victoria, wherever they found a place comfortabl­e.”

The estimated 450 members of the Tlowitsis First Nation haven’t had a permanent home since then.

But that is about to change, Smith said. The nation paid $3.5 million earlier this year for a 257-hectare rural, forested property eight kilometres south of Campbell River. Plans are now underway to establish a community of up to 100 homes, he said.

“One of our hereditary chiefs, before he passed away, said he wanted a place for my people to have a home. This is basically a promise kept. The chief was my oldest brother Alec.”

Frogs croak, ravens squawk and vehicles drive past as Smith stands at the steel gate and sign that mark the site in the Strathcona Regional District. The new community will be called Nenagwas, which means “a place to come home to,” Smith said. Last Decem- ber, the federal government approved the property as Tlowitsis reserve 12.

“This place in 30 years could be a very large place,” Smith said. “Indigenous people have lots of babies. It’s going to be an exciting place for our young people to grow up.”

Engineerin­g and planning studies are underway, and the nation expects to break ground in 2020, bringing the dream of a new home community much closer to reality, hesaid.

“We need a place for our members to get together and share things and learn their culture, their history. What it means to be Tlowitsis,” Smith said. “This will help.”

Brenda Leigh, the Strathcona Regional District’s elected area director, said local residents had concerns about a lack of consultati­on, but now the focus is on developing infrastruc­ture like sewage and transporta­tion and fitting the Tlowitsis community into the sprawling, rural neighbourh­ood.

“I am sure that they will love this setting and they will have an opportunit­y to build their reserve and enjoy the same peaceful life that all of us value so much in this region,” Leigh said in an emailed statement.

Smith said early reaction to the Tlowitsis plan was shrill and concerned his band members. Graffiti with the words “No Rez” was painted on a road near the community site.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Thomas Smith stands at the road leading to property near Campbell River where the Tlowitsis First Nation plans to build a community.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Thomas Smith stands at the road leading to property near Campbell River where the Tlowitsis First Nation plans to build a community.

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