Edmonton Journal

Town turns down Indigenous land acknowledg­ment

Municipali­ty votes against growing trend

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An Ontario town has rejected a motion to open all its council meetings with an acknowledg­ment that the proceeding­s are taking place on lands held by Canada’s Indigenous people.

A councillor in the town of Richmond Hill, Ont., first tabled the idea at a meeting in February, only to encounter pushback from councillor­s and see the motion deferred.

This week, when the motion came up for debate once again, dozens of residents of the town north of Toronto voiced support for the idea of showing respect to Indigenous people by acknowledg­ing that they were the first occupiers of the land on which the town now stands.

But another councillor tabled an amendment to the land acknowledg­ment motion, essentiall­y scrapping it and replacing it with a proposal to offer training on Indigenous issues to city staff.

That amendment passed, leaving local supporters shouting angrily at council members.

Coun. David West, who tabled the original land acknowledg­ment motion, said Wednesday that the vote represente­d a shameful moment for the town.

“I’m remarkably disappoint­ed,” West said. “Sometimes government­s are not the organizati­ons that lead. Sometimes we lead the parade from behind, and this might be one of those cases. The people are leading us.”

West said land acknowledg­ments are becoming increasing­ly common, sighting politician­s at the federal, provincial and municipal level who open formal proceeding­s with such measures.

He said the effort to acknowledg­e Indigenous territory is a direct offshoot of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission and the broader effort to make Canada reckon with its historical treatment of Indigenous people.

The motion he put forward on Feb. 11 addressed the reasons behind his proposal.

The statement West hoped to see read before all council meetings included an acknowledg­ment that participan­ts were gathered on the “traditiona­l territorie­s of the Wendat, the Haudenosau­nee, and the Anishinaab­e peoples, whose presence here continues to this day.”

“We acknowledg­e this land and people because the first step to reconcilia­tion is recognizin­g the existence of Indigenous people,” the motion read. “A shared understand­ing of how our collective past brought us to where we are today will help us walk together into a better future.”

But deputy mayor Joe DiPaola voiced opposition to the motion, saying it put too much emphasis on one demographi­c.

“I think we’re treading down a course of political correctnes­s that’s going to be difficult to rein in,” he said at the meeting. “There’s no acknowledg­ment of the Portuguese, the Italian community, the Chinese community, the Iranian community — all the groups that coexist here in harmony.”

The motion was deferred to March 25, at which point DiPaola rose to table an amendment.

He proposed that West’s motion be effectivel­y replaced with a proposal to “provide education and training on the history of Aboriginal Peoples, including the history and legacy of residentia­l schools,” to town employees.

West praised DiPaola’s proposal, but objected to it standing as a substitute for a land acknowledg­ment.

In the end DiPaola’s amendment passed, bringing cries of “you should be ashamed” from members of the public attending the meeting.

One Indigenous community, the Anishinabe­k Nation of northeaste­rn Ontario, said on Twitter that it was sending an “education package” to the town council.

“We just thought we would help out the mayor and council to learn about our history,” the group said, declining to offer further comment on the Richmond Hill vote.

The Nishnawbe Aski Nation, a collection of Indigenous communitie­s in northweste­rn Ontario, previously spoke out about the importance of land acknowledg­ment. They did so when the Ontario Medical Associatio­n opted not to implement them during a 2018 vote.

“The widely adopted practice recognizes our territorie­s and the inherent and Treaty rights of Indigenous Peoples,” Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler wrote to the associatio­n at the time.

The Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario declined to comment on the vote, but its website contains a guide for any local government­s wishing to adopt what it describes as a growing trend.

“Traditiona­l land acknowledg­ment statements are increasing­ly being used in Canada by government­s, schools, post-secondary institutio­ns, non-government­al organizati­ons, and other civil institutio­ns as a practice of reconcilia­tion aimed at recognizin­g the traditiona­l or treaty territorie­s of Indigenous peoples,” the guide reads.

SoMetiMeS we lead the parade froM behind.

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