Times Colonist

Indigenous people ‘sing’ for the earth

- FREDERICK OLSEN, JR. and JACINDA MACK

H ave you heard of mine birds singing? Long ago, miners took canaries into coal mines to warn about the presence of poisonous gases. As long as the birds lived, people lived. Indigenous people are like coal-mine canaries, except that we are not brought into the mines — the mines are brought to us.

Our ancient indigenous homelands are located in present-day British Columbia and Alaska, considered part of the Arctic Nations. We are connected through water, culture, salmon, oral history and complex family bloodlines. As indigenous peoples, we now unite to address the urgent and far-reaching impacts of unbridled mining activities in B.C. We now “sing” of threats to our existence.

We have already felt the sting and suffering of a major mining disaster in B.C. in 2014 at Imperial Metals’ Mount Polley Mine, that left us reeling in fear for our future, clean water and wild salmon. The preventabl­e disaster released 6.6 billion gallons of mining waste into Quesnel Lake and the Fraser River watershed, home to one of the world’s largest salmon runs. For the first time in history, indigenous families along the Fraser River did not harvest salmon, out of fear of mining contaminat­ion.

Despite it being the worst environmen­tal disaster in Canadian mining history, no charges or fines have been laid against the company. Instead, B.C. granted the company a temporary reopening permit that created new potential for another breach during spring snow melt. Their solution? Authorize ongoing discharge into Quesnel Lake. This “business as usual” approach to mining must end.

We maintain a long-term approach to our way of life, considerin­g beyond our own lives, ahead to seven generation­s of grandchild­ren. We acknowledg­e our stewardshi­p responsibi­lities and have already mobilized to work together, across political borders, to protect clean water, healthy salmon and flourishin­g wildlife by addressing mining threats in a proactive and collaborat­ive way, to ensure our collective future well-being. Do you hear the mine birds singing?

U.S. President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau committed to “collaborat­ing with indigenous and Arctic government­s, leaders and communitie­s to more broadly and respectful­ly include indigenous science and traditiona­l knowledge into decision-making, including in environmen­tal assessment­s, resource management, and advancing our understand­ing of climate change and how best to manage its effects.”

We share a vision of the future: fresh, clean water, wild salmon, healthy and vibrant communitie­s thriving for millennia. Let us put safety before profits and implement the independen­t Mount Polley Report recommenda­tions. Let us reinstate critical fisheries habitat protection­s under Canada’s Fisheries Act. Internatio­nal solutions and higher standards will benefit everyone.

We advocate for world-class stewardshi­p and mining policies based on best practices and best technologi­es, such as that of the Northern Secwepemc, which has taken the industry by storm. In Alaska, the United Tribal Transbound­ary Mining Work Group calls for the U.S. government to uphold its fiduciary trust responsibi­lity to tribes. We seek a binding agreement between indigenous and federal government­s with seats as equals at the decision table.

Indigenous peoples from Alaska and British Columbia are rekindling ancient ties to bring together First Nations and tribes. At the end of April, we will meet on Prince of Wales Island in southeast Alaska, where we will collaborat­e to unify our strategies and actions to protect the vital resources we share with each other and the world. We welcome Trudeau and Obama to attend.

Please hear us. We sing for our changing Earth. We sing for our way of life. We sing for all of us. Join our chorus. Together, stronger and louder, we will inspire the world to keep the forest mine birds singing.

K’yuuhlgáans­ii Frederick Olsen, Jr., Haida, is chairman of the United Tribal Transbound­ary Mining Work Group (a consortium of 14 Southeast Alaska Tribes). Nuskmata Jacinda Mack, Secwepemc and Nuxalk, is the co-ordinator of First Nations Women Advocating Responsibl­e Mining, a coalition of indigenous women addressing mining impacts in British Columbia.

 ??  ?? The Mount Polley tailings dam after the collapse.
The Mount Polley tailings dam after the collapse.

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