National Post (National Edition)

B.C. chief fights treaty process

- BY TAMSYN BURGMANN

VANCOUVER •A stack of overlappin­g land claims by First Nations is a “cancer” within British Columbia’s treaty process, says a prominent provincial chief spearheadi­ng a court challenge of the decades-old method of negotiatin­g aboriginal rights and title in the province.

The seven-member Okanagan National Alliance has filed a civil claim in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver disputing the B.C. Treaty Process, and centres its legal action around an agreement between the province and Ktunaxa Nation Council.

The incrementa­l treaty agreement was signed in March 2013 and gives the Cranbrook, B.C., nation and its adjoining bands 242 hectares of land in the West Kootenay. The deal is the first stage of forging a broader treaty.

But the alliance argues the majority of nine parcels of property being signed over actually falls within its own members’ traditiona­l territory.

Alliance chairman and Grand Chief Stewart Phillip argues a “fundamenta­lly flawed” B.C. Treaty Process is hampering fair resolution of the dispute.

“This process has been around now for approximat­ely 23 years. It has cost billions of dollars with very little result,” Chief Phillip said in an interview on Monday.

He said he believes the government is signing so many of these incrementa­l agreements because of the criticism around the glacial pace of treaty talks. “The overlap issue is the cancer of the B.C. Treaty Process.”

British Columbia is the only province that didn’t sign agreements with its First Nations in the 1800s. There are only a couple of modern-day treaties.

The process for negotiatin­g aboriginal land rights was establishe­d in 1992 by agreement of the province, the federal government and the First Nations Summit.

Those efforts created the B.C. Treaty Commission, an independen­t body devised to facilitate the treaty negotiatio­ns.

The lawsuit seeks a declaratio­n by the provincial government, under the minister of aboriginal relations, that it failed to consult with the alliance before unilateral­ly moving ahead with the Ktunaxa deal. It’s also seeking an inj unction stopping the province from taking further steps to transfer the lands, known as the Wensley Bench.

The alliance contends the land signed away includes village sites, hunting grounds and other cultural heritage sites important to its own members. The legal action was filed after the group attempted for more than a year to resolve the issue with the province directly, Phillip said.

He said many swaths of land are in dispute across the province, but it’s only when a claimant group is at the point of signing off on an agreement that it triggers the concern of the adjacent community.

“It’s like your neighbour talking ad nauseam about what they want to do in terms of improving their property,” he said, “and you don’t really pay much attention to it until the guy starts knocking your fence down and encroachin­g on half of your property to complete his renovation of his house.”

Process has cost billions of dollars with very little

result

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