The Telegram (St. John's)

Two sides in land claim case battle over whether Wolastoqey properly consulted

- JOHN CHILIBECK LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER, THE DAILY GLEANER

The legal claim was launched in 2020 and is expected to take a decade or more to litigate, unless a settlement is reached first.

New Brunswick’s provincial government and the Wolastoqey Nation battled in court Thursday as lawyers from both sides argued whether Indigenous communitie­s were being properly consulted or given short shrift on big forestry decisions.

For four days, legal teams representi­ng the province, Ottawa, Indigenous leaders and big timber companies have been presenting arguments before Justice Kathryn Gregory of the Court of King’s Bench.

She’s presiding over the Wolastoqey Nation’s big title claim for more than half of New Brunswick’s territory, on the western side, on what they consider their traditiona­l lands.

The province has presented a motion to strike out a portion of their lawsuit, asking the judge to remove more than 250,000 land parcels owned by everyday New Brunswicke­rs and private property held by several big timber firms named as defendants in the case.

The legal claim was launched in 2020 and is expected to take a decade or more to litigate, unless a settlement is reached first. It involves so many lawyers, the province rented a large conference room at the Fredericto­n Inn to run the court proceeding­s.

Most arguments presented over the four days referred to previous court cases, but one in particular raised tension on Thursday.

Josh Mcelman, the lawyer representi­ng the province, brought up Haida Gwaii, previously known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, off of the western coast.

Twenty years ago, the Supreme Court of Canada said the provincial government of British Columbia had a strong obligation to meaningful­ly consult with the Haida Nation about logging on the archipelag­o. That ruling has served as a template for provincial government­s across Canada on the duty to consult Indigenous people on big resource projects that impact their traditiona­l territory.

Since then, B.C. and the Haida had been girding for a legal battle over Aboriginal title — an accepted legal concept in Canada which conveys a bundle of communal property rights to an Indigenous society. But last week, the two sides suddenly announced a settlement that will recognize both the Haida’s Aboriginal title and private property owners’ fee simple rights.

Mcelman used that case to pivot from his argument that New Brunswick had already been consulting meaningful­ly on issues of importance to the Wolastoqey.

He said he took issue with a theme that the Wolastoqey had promoted during the court proceeding­s — that the province was avoiding its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to Indigenous people.

The lawyer pointed out that before the New Brunswick forestry strategy was released last year, the provincial government had spent 11 months consulting First Nations.

It also establishe­d a roundtable on forestry between the minister of natural resources and Indigenous chiefs to talk about wood harvesting and preservati­on areas, among other topics.

Mcelman then brought up the proposed Sisson Mine, which saw the two sides negotiate an accommodat­ion agreement in 2017 if the property 100 kilometres northwest of the capital were ever developed to extract tungsten and molybdenum rock.

The agreement includes a revenue-sharing formula, environmen­tal monitoring, training and employment opportunit­ies for Indigenous people and a future land swap as replacemen­t property for the traditiona­l territory they’d lose.

“They want a Haida-like arrangemen­t that’s already here,” Mcelman said to the judge. “There is no live controvers­y on this.”

There was muttering from one of three Wolastoqey chiefs sitting in the public gallery, as both the forestry strategy and the Sisson mine have caused upset in their communitie­s.

When Mike Holland, the natural resources minister, announced the strategy, the chiefs dumped on it, and shortly after the Sisson Mine accommodat­ion agreement was signed, several Indigenous protesters, including a group of grandmothe­rs, set up an encampment on the proposed industrial site.

Renée Pelletier, lead counsel for the Wolastoqey, immediatel­y took issue, standing up and raising an objection.

“My clients would have a lot to say about this,” she said, pointing to the public gallery. “This is not like Haida at all.”

The judge questioned Mcelman. “No live issue?” she said. “There’s clearly disagreeme­nt between the parties.”

But after Mcelman had resumed, Pelletier continued making objections, arguing the government’s side was trying to present new evidence and she should have another opportunit­y to respond.

“Let’s just bring down the temperatur­e,” the judge said. “This is very complex. If there’s something burning that you must bring up, we can deal with it.”

 ?? JOHN CHILIBECK ?? The Wolastoqey title claim was back in court last week in Fredericto­n, a case that’s expected to take as long as a decade to litigate.
JOHN CHILIBECK The Wolastoqey title claim was back in court last week in Fredericto­n, a case that’s expected to take as long as a decade to litigate.

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