Medicine Hat News

City reveals statement to recognize First Nations, but won’t read it much

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

City council will be asked next week to approve a local statement that recognizes First Nations, but doesn’t mention specific treaties and would only be used in certain circumstan­ces.

A final draft of a “Statement of Acknowledg­ement, Respect and Recognitio­n” was presented to this week’s public services committee and could be approved at Monday’s council meeting.

It would be read at events of “cultural significan­ce” attended by city hall officials, but not as a matter of general protocol at meetings and press conference­s as other government­s have made standard.

“When you put it everywhere, nobody sees it after a while,” said Coun. Julie Friesen, chair of the committee. “This isn’t just about a statement, but about demonstrat­ing that in what we do.”

On Monday, the committee was also presented with a list of events and city actions that relate to recommenda­tions made by both the federal government and the United Nations regarding the Truth and Reconcilia­tion efforts with Indigenous peoples.

They include the city’s management of the Saamis Tepee site, the recent designatio­n of Saratoga Park as an area of significan­ce, and a number of events centring on inclusion.

The suggested statement would read:

“The City of Medicine Hat acknowledg­es that we live and work on treaty territory. The City pays respect to all Indigenous Peoples and honours their past, present and future. We recognize and respect their cultural heritages and relationsh­ip to the land.”

It was developed by public members of council’s arts and heritage advisory board, after a review of other municipali­ties’ statements and discussion­s with the local Miywasin Friendship Centre and the local Métis community.

Council directed staff to draft the statement last spring, at which time several councillor­s and Mayor Ted Clugston said they would prefer it be used as a sort of mission statement but not as standard precursor to city business.

This week officials said the statement makes a sincere effort toward reconcilia­tion and therefore should be used at appropriat­e events to make it more powerful.

“It strikes the right balance,” said Brian Mastel, head of the public services division.

Background informatio­n also states that mention of specific groups in the statement could be controvers­ial and not promote inclusion.

In terms of treaties, the corporate limits of Medicine Hat physically span the boundary of Treaties 4 and 7, which deal with Cree, Sioux, Saulteaux and Ojibwa peoples in southern

Alberta and Saskatchew­an. The area was both a meeting space and disputed territory for numerous groups in both Canada and the United States during the era before European settlement.

As well, the Métis population­s are well noted in a “Historical Context paper” commission­ed by the city in 2013, from which background informatio­n for the current statement was taken.

Specific treaties were noted during provincial government announceme­nts when the New Democrats were in power before 2018, and by the federal government today, though the province no longer observes the practice.

 ??  ?? Julie Friesen
Julie Friesen

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