Bigstone chief, councillors divvy up $700,000
Bigstone chief, councillors divvy up $700K
An Alberta First Nation is mired in controversy after its chief and council recently awarded themselves bonuses worth nearly $700,000, apparently unbeknownst to the band membership until after the cheques were cut.
The Bigstone Cree Nation band council’s decision to take a payment from a band-owned company it controls points to problems with the band’s governance and could be unlawful, according to Sean Jones, a Vancouver lawyer practising Indigenous law.
“If the band doesn’t have any bylaws that authorize this, there certainly could be a problem here," he said. “Certainly there’s clearly a risk of conflict of interest.”
The bonus cheques were issued after a plan to nearly double a severance allowance for the First Nation’s elected representatives was abandoned this summer. Chief Gordon Auger had put forward the plan less than a month before he announced his own retirement ahead of the band’s upcoming election, slated for the end of October. After the plan became public, the increase was scrapped — and replaced with bonuses.
Travis Gladue-Beauregard, a band member who opposes the decision, said the issue is part of a larger transparency problem within the First Nation government. “It’s really sad, because we have a lot of members that are living in poverty,” he said.
The Bigstone Cree Nation, which includes the communities of Wabasca, Chipewyan Lake and Calling Lake in northern Alberta, has a population of roughly 8,000 and is governed by a chief and 10 councillors from the three communities.