Regina Leader-Post

Look North for Canada's economic future

Indigenous communitie­s ready for investment influx, writes Sean Willy.

- Sean Willy is CEO of Des Nedhe Developmen­t, a diverse national company owned by the English River First Nation and based in Saskatoon. He is a member of the North Slave Métis Alliance and an adviser to the Task Force for Real Jobs, Real Recovery.

In the 1850s, the call to action that held promise and purpose was Go West.

Now, in this decade, it's time for a new direction: Canadians need to Look North, and support North, for the future strength of this country.

We need to invest in fullstream infrastruc­ture in northern communitie­s and for Indigenous communitie­s and Indigenous peoples.

I know the communitie­s are ready, and if we answer the call to Look North, we will have the resources to support Canada and embolden a more self-sufficient nation.

There are many positive, shared-value models across the country with progressiv­e resource developers and Indigenous communitie­s working together. We can forge this same path throughout the North.

By providing northern communitie­s the same electrical infrastruc­ture, telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture, roads, waste water and water infrastruc­ture as southern communitie­s, we can then work together to develop natural resources sustainabl­y.

We have legislatio­n to ensure First Nations, Métis and Inuit communitie­s have a strong voice in developmen­t.

I was born in the Northwest Territorie­s, and built my career in northern Canada. I now work for the English River First Nation, a Dene community in northern Saskatchew­an. This tenacious community saw the opportunit­y in front of them, and seized it, beginning their economic developmen­t journey. They've stepped up as active partners and leaders to be included in resource developmen­t, and now hold more than 30 years of experience in the uranium industry.

You just have to take the next step on that road, and sometimes it's Indigenous communitie­s saying, “We can do this.” We have a strong entreprene­urial spirit within

Indigenous communitie­s. We need to take that spirit and create our own revenues, jobs for community members and opportunit­ies within our communitie­s.

That doesn't mean putting economics ahead of the environmen­t. We must have a commitment early on to ensure we're always actively involved in decisions that can impact the environmen­t, ongoing environmen­tal monitoring and the reclamatio­n and decommissi­oning of projects.

Government has a role to play in northern developmen­t because of the jurisdicti­onal hurdles that exist in Canada. Much of Canada's population lives within 100 kilometres of the American border. Most of the government money that goes to health care, for example, is for an aging baby-boomer population in the south.

We need more focus on northern Canada where there's a smaller, much younger population. This means reallocati­ng taxes to this vital region. The longer we ignore investing, the more expensive it will be.

The Buy American sentiment and lack of respect for our resources is taking hold in the U.S. The Biden administra­tion killing the Keystone XL pipeline is testament. To continue to grow, Canada needs to open other trade routes.

We have what the world needs in natural resources. Indigenous people can add tremendous value to accessing these resources, and Indigenous people want a share in them. This can, and will, provide a shared value to all Canadians.

The value propositio­n is simple: if you are working with a Canadian Indigenous supplier, that revenue stays in Canada and supports infrastruc­ture, services and the growth of Indigenous communitie­s.

Make no mistake, these communitie­s are increasing­ly ready to play their part, contribute and benefit from this new era.

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