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magazine / apr08 / indepth
Landmark land settlement
Canada’s first modern, urban treaty gives the Tsawwassen First Nation control of its land and the chance at a prosperous future
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Q&A: Mayor Lois Jackson
Interviewed by Carol Hilton
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| Photo courtesy of the Corporation of Delta |
As mayor of Delta, B.C., Lois Jackson represents 100,000 people living on 364 square kilometres
south of Vancouver including the Tsawwassen reserve. But the Tsawwassen Treaty will create
a new municipal government in the centre of her community. She opposes the treaty because
of the impact it will have on farmers and fishermen in Delta, and also because of the effect
it will have on some of her constituents, non-aboriginal reserve residents, who under the
treaty will be able to vote neither for the new Tsawwassen government, nor for Delta council.
CG: Has opposing the Tsawwassen treaty affected your relationship with the members of the First Nation?
LJ: I think in the long run our association will be a good one. It will take some time for my community to wrestle with the idea that the best land in the Lower
Mainland —which is the land that has been transferred to Tsawwassen by the provincial government — the best land for food production will now be covered with containers from the
port. The provincial government originally expropriated these lands from farmers many years ago and instead of giving the land back to farmers when they no longer needed it for
roadways or anything else, the government turned it over to the band.
CG: These agricultural lands were part of the Agricultural
Land Reserve established in 1973, a province-wide program that protected farmland from industrial
development. Yet the Tsawwassen deal included 207 hectares of this land?
LJ: Yes. The Agricultural Land Reserve designated all of the good farm soils
in British Columbia as a zoned agricultural area. In other words, you couldn’t put
houses on them or shopping centres or gas stations. Only five percent of the soil in the
whole province is capable of growing anything. We don’t have very much soil here because
it’s all mountains. The Delta lands are among the very best, mainly because soil has
been deposited here over thousands of years. Delta soil is very good for farming, very flat.
CG: What stands to be lost with the loss of agriculture? Are
jobs at stake?
LJ: Yes, I guess to some degree. But I think it’s mostly about the
loss of our ability to farm in British Columbia and not totally depend on the importation
of our food from the United States. I think it’s an overall societal loss. If it’s
done here, where else will it be done? There are Indian bands all over British Columbia.
And it sounds like I’m being a negative person, but in British Columbia right now there
are tremendous numbers of land claims. So if we are going to look at Tsawwassen as a template
for other bands in the province, are there going to be other major agricultural areas converted
to the use of containers or something else? The precedent has been set.
CG: Besides agriculture, were there other resource issues that raised concerns?
LJ: The question of fish on the West Coast is a big one still. The preferential
fishing negotiated with the federal government (giving Tsawwassen band members exclusive
commercial fishing rights based on their ancestry) is a huge problem for the rest of the
fishing community because this will be the first of many treaties, and if you extrapolate
it out, the Indian bands would be getting something like 170% of the fish on the West Coast,
which of course is ridiculous, but that’s how it extrapolates out.
CG: If you were to speculate, what do you think this will mean for future treaties and resource management?
LJ: It will, in my opinion, be another precedent. And again, we're not casting aspersions on the Indian bands, but they are going to ask for as much
as they can get, and if the government says, 'Yes, you can have it,' that's where my concern is. It's the governments saying they can have it and no one else can. We're
talking about democracy, fairness and equity among all Canadians, and it's the federal and provincial governments that are not delivering that to the rest of the country.
So once the precedent is set here, it will be set everywhere.
CG: You have also raised concerns about the non-aboriginal people who live in Tsawwassen lands being put in a position of taxation without
representation. How many people will this affect?
LJ: There are over 700 people who live on the band lands but are not natives, but I think I'm conservative there. Those people lease land
or lease premises, or own houses on leased land, and in the past these folks were taxed by the local municipality, which was Delta municipality, and they received
benefits and they voted in Delta municipal elections and so on. This will not happen now when the Tsawwassen have their own lands. The folks who live there will pay
taxes directly to the band, but in essence when election time comes, they don't get to vote in the band election. That was very much entrenched with all of us because
taxation without representation was something that people fought for and died over.
CG: So those people won't have any representation through Delta or through the band?
LJ: That's correct. Now, what the provincial government has said is that they will set up a committee and these people can speak to the committee and
try and sort things out. And that's fine—but it is still taxation without representation. I don't care what they call it. You don't have a vote; you can't kick somebody
out of office because they raised your taxes. So, that was very important to a lot of the people who live there. And when the treaty is finalized, obviously they will
have to abide by whatever the band council says they have to.
CG: Does the B.C. treaty process allow for input from neighbouring municipalities?
LJ: Very little. The provincial government created something called the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Committee, but it was basically a toothless tiger.
It was a way of saying local government had input, but in fact that was not really the case.
CG: These treaty advisory committees were set up all over the province in the early 1990s. What is the problem with how these committees work?
LJ: As time went on, a lot of these local treaty advisory committees that were originally sponsored by the provincial government fell by the wayside
because they got to be costly. The one that remained in the Lower Mainland was called the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Committee, but there hasn't been much that has
come from it. One of the reasons I believe this has not worked very well is the fact that the committee was dealing with the bureaucrats from the provincial and federal
governments. They weren't dealing with the elected people from Victoria or Ottawa. So, it would go around and around, around and around and around, and there were never
really any motions in place; they just discussed things. And that's still going on today.
CG: And that was the only opportunity for municipalities to have a say?
LJ: Yes. And one of the biggest problems with all the discussions about treaties from the very beginning in the 1990s, was that everything has been
in secret. The public never had a chance to look at it or find out about it. The press didn't know anything about it. It was all secret.
CG: You mean the details of what was being discussed were not available to the public?
LJ: Yes, anything to do with fishing or agricultural land or giving up land or money or any of that. It was all done behind closed doors, and that's
one of the reasons that Delta opted out of that treaty advisory group two or three years ago, because we said we are not going to keep all this information secret from
the people of Delta. The secrecy of these things is absolutely unacceptable in this country as far as I'm concerned. The treaties are signed by the band, the provincial
government and the federal government, and local government is not even in the picture.
CG: As a politician you inherit issues of the past, so is it difficult to be critical of an effort that is ostensibly attempting to make amends
for past wrongs against First Nations people, while still representing your constituency?
LJ: I think my role is very clear. We are dealing with the year 2008. I've been raised in Canada to believe that we are all equal and we should all have equal
rights, and equal responsibilities and equal opportunities, whether it's language or jobs or anything else. What I'm finding as I age, though, is some people are more
equal than others.
CG: What is your outlook moving forward?
LJ: Senior governments have spoken and we'll have to carry on. I'm not sure what will happen in the future with other treaties. There are some people
who are concerned for the future in terms of the agricultural lands, the fishery and the issue of taxation without representation. But, nonetheless, all I can do is tell
you we hope to move on and have a good relationship with the band as we move forward.
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| Treaty talk |
“I’m not sure what will happen in the future with other treaties. There are some people who are concerned for the future in terms of the agricultural lands, the fishery and the issue of taxation without representation.” — Lois Jackson, Mayor of Delta
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| Comments on this article | Leave a comment | Creator. when you think of what our forefathers were doing for treaties, they had vision, us as first nation people, have that birthright, vision. now for modern day treaties to even carry weight, one must see how did we go about it. did we use every tool, ceremony, and the spirit world, or do we just use all the confusion that we have attained over the years and find whats best. too many of our people have not even grasped the power and the wisdom of our ancestors or even use what we already have. Treaties, Treaties, Treaties, think about that for awhile. They have not come from creator. we think and beleive we have done good with these treaties,, when you look at it, its meaningless. its a bandaid for now. in time, all this will be back to how it is, in the meantime, we're just playing a silly game, suffering is going on, our people lie and are lied to, killing, gangs, poor housing, poor reserves, stealing from one another, all these are just games. When we have seen all this, now and in the future as it will get worse, maybe our leaders will use there full potential as a human, a nation, as it has been bestowed among our people, our gift of vision, to see what is there, what can be done. But then the government doesn't see it that way, so why then, shall we be forced to see things within this treaty way.Yet its right in front of us to live our life, and see that what this commotion is really is meaningless. sounds crazy, but thats the difference between seeing what is there, and not seeing, which eventually helps us to understand life in the physical or the spiritual realm. It is both sad and useless, to see what our leaders are doing without consulting with creator. what can we do? fight it? why? Do what we can for now I guess, get what we can, riiiiiiiiiigt.
According to my understanding, there is very few fertile land in the world. The population is increasing, but the fertile land is decreasing day by day. Canada occupies 7% of the world's land but we have limited fertile land. Tsawwassen land is one of the most fertile lands in BC. If we use such a fertile land for other purposes than farming, there will be negative impact in ecosystem. Infrastructure like an airport, port, housing, roads, railway etc should be constructed on a non-fertile land. We have to think sustainable development. So Tsawwassen Treaty is concern only for business purposes - it only tried to make money by constructing a port instead of farming.
The treaty was driven by the Gateway - the provincial plan to expand the port and connect it with new and wider highways. This ignores the collapse of the US dollar, the steep decline in cross Pacific container traffic, the availability of new routres such as the North West passage and the widened Panama Canal and the key role played by the railways in moving transcontinental freight. All these issues are dealt at length in my blog - stephenrees.wordpress.com and on the Livable Region web site livableregion.ca.
This is typical of the short term thinking that bedevils our political system. We need to take a strategic view of how our world is changing - and how to cope with that. Unfortunately, the appeals to justice in the TFN process have been ignored by the grab for the quick buck. A sad day for Canada and the Tsawwassen, who both deserve much better leaders with real vision
The TFN treaty was done without proper consideration of the Semiahmoo First Nation treaty, the protection of our Agricultural Land Reserve, or the Environment. This is not about giving TFN its due... its about expanding DeltaPort at the expense of our farmland, the Fraser River estuary, and our air quality in a area that shouldn't have been considered for a port in the first place. Tsawwassen First Nations accepted individual cash payouts from the government for signing the treaty and now we will all have to live with the blight of container sprawl on some of the best farmland and most important wildlife habitat in the world.
Just a few miles to the North in Richmond we have another parcel of the prime agricultural land that is currently under the review of the Agriculture Land Commission to be probably released from the ALR and be developed into the mixed residential area - our beautiful 136 acres Garden City Lands. The First Nations people needs are used as a reason for the land to be developed again so they can get their money and we can loose another parcel of the land that could feed our children. Their children need to eat as well - all our children will suffer in the future because the land, once developed, will be lost for the agriculture forever. There is not enough appreciation for the value of the undeveloped land now.
Food security issues and rising price of fuel make the value of the land that is close to our home much higher - now it might be not economically viable and next decade it will be for sure, especially when virgin lands are involved - they can be used for the fast start of the organic farming with much higher prices and unlimited demand.
Dear Editor, As Chair of the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Committee (LMTAC), I would like to provide the following comments in response to your recent feature on the Tsawwassen Final Agreement, as well as provide another perspective on local government participation in the BC Treaty Process. “Treaty Advisory Committees” were established across the province in response to local government demands to have a direct voice in the BC Treaty Process. Through LMTAC, Lower Mainland area local governments actively participated as full members of the provincial negotiating team at the Tsawwassen Treaty table since substantive discussions began in 1995. In addition to providing advice and local government perspective on issues, LMTAC participation included having a local government representative at the treaty table during the negotiations. Given the unique complexity of the urban Lower Mainland, it was essential for LMTAC to be directly involved in the treaty negotiations to ensure that issues important to residents and local governments, both municipal and regional, were raised and understood by the First Nations, Federal and Provincial governments. Treaty negotiations are a long process however, LMTAC strongly supports the objective of treaties to provide certainty with respect to aboriginal rights and title. As local governments, we favour negotiated settlements that have the potential to build relationships rather than litigation that can be just as time consuming and costly. Negotiations by their very nature require give and take by all sides, and LMTAC’s analysis of the Tsawwassen Final Agreement revealed that a majority (88%) of issues identified by local government were addressed. The Intergovernmental Relations and Services Chapter is an achievement in which LMTAC is proud to have had an active role in development. Tsawwassen’s participation in regional governance structures will encourage understanding and the opportunity for all Lower Mainland local governments to work together on matters of mutual interest. Despite positive efforts on governance matters, LMTAC does acknowledge that, given the nature of negotiations, there were a few issues in which local government interests were not fully met, such as the ‘Specified Lands’ approach to post-treaty additions to Treaty Settlement Lands (TSL), because it removes the requirement of municipal consent, and the exclusion of some portions of proposed TSL from the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) without due process. While LMTAC continues to advocate the need for more public information on the BC Treaty Process, it’s important to note that treaty negotiations, like any other form of negotiations, do require adherence to confidentially given the sensitivity of matters under discussion. Through LMTAC, Lower Mainland Councils and Boards were provided with regular treaty table updates, with some matters restricted to closed sessions. In recognition of the work ahead in implementing the Tsawwassen Final Agreement, LMTAC is very interested to see a smooth transition into the post-treaty environment, and we believe that our experience as local governments will be a valuable resource to assist Tsawwassen First Nation as it takes on new governance responsibilities.
Mayor Ralph Drew, Chair Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Committee
Website: www.lmtac.bc.ca Email: ralph.drew@telus.net Home: (604) 937-0143 Office: (604) 451-6198 Cell: (778) 868-5378
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