The Province

Promise to First Nations honoured as B.C. offers share of gambling revenue

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The B.C. government has pledged to share some of the pie and more of the power with Indigenous communitie­s across the province.

All B.C. First Nations will receive a share of provincial gambling revenues, Premier John Horgan announced Thursday as he opened the annual gathering between B.C.’s cabinet and First Nations leaders.

“This is a promise made over 20 years ago that has not yet been fulfilled until now,” Horgan told the gathering in Vancouver.”

Horgan and the First Nations Leadership Council also announced that they’ll be working together on new legislatio­n to implement the United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, with introducti­on of the law planned for sometime in 2019.

The revenue-sharing arrangemen­t will be a key part of the February 2019 provincial budget, Horgan said, but final details were still being worked out so he couldn’t release exact figures.

“It will be big,” the premier said. “Somewhere between one and a whole bunch.”

The premier said the annual funding will be used in First Nations communitie­s for social services, education, housing, infrastruc­ture, health and well-being, and economic developmen­t.

Both announceme­nts are important steps forward to advance true and lasting reconcilia­tion, Horgan said.

“As we develop reconcilia­tion, as we develop legislatio­n around (the UN declaratio­n) that will mean all laws in British Columbia will have a lens of how will it affect our First peoples, how will it affect those who have been here for millennium.”

The declaratio­n was adopted by the UN in 2007 as an internatio­nal instrument that enshrined minimum standards for the survival, dignity and well-being of Indigenous peoples around the world.

B.C. regional Chief Terry Teegee of the Assembly of First Nations said the announceme­nts are “historic and progressiv­e action” to address issues related to jurisdicti­on and gambling revenue.

Cheryl Casimer of the First Nations Summit political executive said the announceme­nts were critical pieces toward reconcilia­tion.

“B.C. First Nations and the government have finally landed on a renewed vision and plan for reconcilin­g Aboriginal title and rights, with asserted Crown title and jurisdicti­on,” Casimer said.

The plan acknowledg­es inherent rights of self-determinat­ion, as well as rights to land, resources and territorie­s, she said, adding both sides must work together based on a new set of principles and values rather than the old colonial standard of denial.

First Nations Summit member Robert Phillips said they’ve been fighting for gaming revenue for decades, and he commended the decision to share the profits.

“If we have prosperous First Nations that will mean extra revenues ... which will mean jobs, which will mean revenue for buying vehicles, houses, all of those things.”

 ?? — CNW GROUP/CARRIER SEKANI TRIBAL COUNCIL ?? B.C. regional Chief Terry Teegee of the AFN praises B.C.’s ‘historic and progressiv­e action’ to address jurisdicti­on and gambling revenue issues.
— CNW GROUP/CARRIER SEKANI TRIBAL COUNCIL B.C. regional Chief Terry Teegee of the AFN praises B.C.’s ‘historic and progressiv­e action’ to address jurisdicti­on and gambling revenue issues.

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