CBC Edition

Peguis First Nation launches $1B flood damages lawsuit against feds, province and 2 municipali­ties

- Bartley Kives

Peguis First Nation has filed a $1-billion flood-dam‐ ages lawsuit against the federal government, the provincial government and two municipali­ties located upstream of the Ojibway and Cree community in Manitoba's northern Inter‐ lake.

In a statement of claim filed before the Manitoba Court of King's Bench on Tuesday, Peguis - the largest First Nation in Manitoba by population, with a registered population of nearly 12,000 is seeking compensati­on for financial losses and other damages that occurred dur‐ ing a series of floods along the Fisher River, the worst of which occurred in 2022.

The First Nation is seeking damages for all losses con‐ nected to the flood, as well as damages for all expenses it incurred fighting the flood and cleaning up after it, ex‐ cept for those already reim‐ bursed by the federal govern‐ ment, according to the claim.

Peguis is also seeking damages caused by "breach of duty and care and negli‐ gence" in failing to prevent or remedy the 2022 flood, "which has made living con‐ ditions on the reserve land ... intolerabl­e and which led to a wholesale evacuation," the claim states.

In a statement, Peguis Chief Stan Bird said the esti‐ mated cost of repairing, re‐ placing or relocating approxi‐ mately 500 flood-affected homes is more than $275 million.

Approximat­ely 550 Peguis community members are still not able to return to the community due to the 2022 flood, while a further 235 are living off-reserve due to floods in 2014 and 2017, he added.

In a subsequent interview, Bird said years of discussion­s about flood protection and flood recovery failed to yield tangible action from the fed‐ eral and provincial govern‐ ments.

"We're at the table talking, and with no clear solution in sight, it's more talk, so we need to look after our own interests as a people and as a community," he said.

In the statement of claim, Peguis calls for Canada and Manitoba to declare the two government­s breached their treaty obligation­s by not pro‐ viding the First Nation with "a sustainabl­e and tolerable liv‐ ing environmen­t, safe and se‐ cure from flooding disasters, through adequate perma‐ nent flood protection for the reserve land."

Peguis also wants the fed‐ eral government to declare it will fulfil its promise to build adequate flood protection at the reserve. The First Nation is seeking an injunction re‐ quiring Canada to build that flood protection or provide funds that will allow it to pro‐ ceed, according to the state‐ ment of claim.

As well, Peguis is seeking damages from the rural mu‐ nicipaliti­es of Fisher and Bifrost-Riverton for allowing land drainage changes to oc‐ cur that affected Peguis downstream, according to the claim.

"There's been a substanti‐ al reduction in water storage through the loss of wetlands and forest lands and an im‐ provement in drainage, which essentiall­y accelerate­s and exacerbate­s the flooding problems," said Brian Meronek, legal counsel for Peguis.

Peguis First Nation has struggled for more than a century to receive compensa‐ tion for the lands it lost after European settlers arrived in the province.

Its reserve lands once in‐ cluded fertile agricultur­al tracts at St. Peter's, along the Red River, in what's now the rural municipali­ty of St. Clements. In 1907, the First Nation was forced to surren‐ der that land and move to a flood-prone area of the northern Interlake.

In a treaty land entitle‐ ment agreement in 2008, Peguis received $64 million, plus a commitment of 167,000 acres (about 67,500 hectares) of both Crown and private land. The following year, the federal government paid Peguis $126 million to settle the illegal surrender of the reserve property north‐ east of Selkirk.

Bird said the history of displaceme­nt and flooding has led to misery for his com‐ munity.

"We just want Manitobans and Canadians to recognize the situation that we were put in, and it's not by our own doing," he said. "It's something that we have to face and try to deal with every year."

Defendants decline or defer comment

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, speaking on behalf of Justice Minister Matt Wiebe, declined comment Wednes‐ day.

"We don't talk about mat‐ ters before the courts," the premier said.

Larissa Love, chief admin‐ istrative officer of the RM of Bifrost-Riverton, deferred comment pending a meeting with the municipali­ty's coun‐ cil.

Shannon Pyziak, reeve of the RM of Fisher, said in an emailed statement that the matter has been referred to the municipali­ty's insurer.

CBC News requested com‐ ment from the federal Justice Ministry and Minister Arif Vi‐ rani, who is named in the claim. A spokespers­on for the Justice Ministry deferred comment to Indigenous Ser‐ vices Canada, which provided a statement saying the gov‐ ernment has received Peguis's statement of claim.

The department is contin‐ uing to work with Peguis on its flooding issues, and In‐ digenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu has signed a memorandum of under‐ standing to formalize long

term flood protection for the First Nation, spokespers­on

Carolane Gratton said in the statement.

From May 2022 to March 2023, Indigenous Services provided approximat­ely $18 million to Peguis First Nation for flood response and recov‐ ery, "including advance pay‐ ments made to ease the bur‐ den of the First Nation's cash flow and to support 2023 flood preparatio­n," Gratton said.

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