Edmonton Journal

Resource developmen­t opportunit­y meets First Nations reality in Ontario’s Ring of Fire

First Nations gain ‘leverage’ as big projects court support

- Heather Scoffield

MARTEN FALLS, Ont . – For Christmas, Chief Eli Moonias received a Toronto Maple Leafs jersey autographe­d by Wendel Clark.

His remote northern Ontario community of Marten Falls got 50 turkeys and a visit from Santa, laden with children’s gifts. And in March, the 61-year-old chief will be granted his wish of travelling to China — if he can get his passport in time.

They’re all gifts from mining companies that need the chief’s support to develop what could be a world-class base-metal discovery.

Moonias’s community sits next to what has become known as the Ring of Fire. Marten Falls is a small, fly-in reserve — just three streets of houses for about 300 people at the junction of the Albany and Ogoki rivers. It’s in the middle of one of the only forests in the world that has never been touched by industry, an area that hosts six of Canada’s biggest rivers.

When trapping for furs lost its lustre several decades ago, nothing replaced it in Marten Falls. Unless the residents are working for the band office or a government-run social service, they’re almost certainly unemployed — and more often than not, addicted to prescripti­on painkiller­s at the expense of putting food on the table for their families. Never have they felt more empowered.

“If you don’t reassure me, that’s when I say No,” Moonias says in an interview at the band’s resource office, wallpapere­d with maps and surveys.

About 130 kilometres to the north of the reserve, multinatio­nal miner Cliffs Natural Resources wants to develop a huge chromite mine to make a key ingredient in stainless steel. The firm brought Marten Falls the Christmas turkeys.

Next door, Toronto-based Noront Resources wants to mine nickel and other base metals. Noront employees chipped together to bring the Leafs shirt, Santa and an entertainm­ent troupe of breakdance­rs.

Co-operation from First Nations is essential for both companies and for anyone else wanting to do business in the remote James Bay lowlands.

“The leverage is there because it’s our territory,” Moonias says bluntly. “The industry needs us on side to go ahead.”

Demand for commoditie­s is expected to stay relatively strong over the coming 20 years, reflecting the growth of the middle class in emerging markets, especially China. But the super-cycle can’t last forever, so the companies want to get their permits and workforces lined up within a few years.

Politicall­y, the stakes are even higher. The Ontario government is dealing with a shrunken manufactur­ing base. The province wants to diversify its economy and envisions tens of thousands of jobs from many mines in the James Bay lowlands.

For the first time in modern history, some of the most isolated, destitute First Nations communitie­s in Canada have something that the rest of the world wants. “This is the only chance we will have to make history right,” says Charlie Okeese, a councillor and former chief of the Fort Hope First Nation, a community larger than Marten Falls but farther away from the prime mining targets. “If we don’t get this right, we can never correct it.”

First Nations don’t have an official veto over resource developmen­t. But as controvers­y over the Northern Gateway pipeline to the West Coast and opposition to some oilsands developmen­t shows, winning their consent makes for a much smoother ride.

For Noront, the Christmas presents are a gesture of goodwill to possible future employees. It’s a fraction of the social outreach Noront has taken on to promote education, training and mining, says Kaitlyn Ferris, the company’s corporate responsibi­lity manager, as she wrapped up a Christmas trip to Webequie, Ont., another aboriginal community.

Dozens of exploratio­n companies flooded to the area about five or six years ago, staking claims, setting up camps, even building airstrips without informing First Nations who consider the vast land theirs. After the companies were reined in by the Ontario government, Webequie had time to take a deep breath.

“At first we didn’t want them here. But as time went by and we understood, we started to realize there may be opportunit­ies,” said Webequie First Nation Chief Cornelius Wabasse, citing the unemployme­nt and severe social challenges of his reserve.

That does not mean a green light for the miners, at least not yet. “We’re trying to figure out how we’re going to fit into this.”

In Marten Falls, band members are on the fence, assuming they will see substantia­l economic benefits but worried about the environmen­tal effects of mining.

“I feel OK with it,” says Paul Achneepine­skum, a 61-yearold father of 12 and a band councillor in Marten Falls.

He was born in the Ring of Fire and spent his childhood trapping and hunting in that area.

He is wistful for that lifestyle, but doesn’t wish it on his children.

“I think about it sometimes,” he says, hesitating. “The reason I think about it is, we were always hungry when we were kids.”

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 ?? Photos: Ryan Remiorz/ THE CANA DIAN PRESS ?? Charlie Okeese, a former chief of the Fort Hope First Nation, looks at mining claims for the Ring of Fire region in northern Ontario.
Photos: Ryan Remiorz/ THE CANA DIAN PRESS Charlie Okeese, a former chief of the Fort Hope First Nation, looks at mining claims for the Ring of Fire region in northern Ontario.
 ??  ?? Suddenly, isolated communitie­s like the Fort Hope First Nation have something the world wants.
Suddenly, isolated communitie­s like the Fort Hope First Nation have something the world wants.

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