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Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Shawn Atleo, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, talk as they take part in the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick /  THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivers a speech at the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper looks on as Elder Commanda performs a smudging ceremony with Shawn Atleo, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, to open the Crown-First Nations Gathering in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper looks on as Elder Commanda performs a smudging ceremony to open the Crown-First Nations Gathering in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrives to the Crown First Nations Gathering with David Johnston, Governor General of Canada, John Duncan, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development and Shawn A-in-chut Atleo, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov.-Gen. David Johnston attend a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Prime Minister Stephen Harper attends a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Chief Isadore Day Wiindawtegowinini of the Serpent River First Nations holds up a wampum belt which he will carry as he takes part in Tuesday's ceremony during the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Monday, January 23, 2012. The belt symbolizes the historic relationship between the Crown and First Nations. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick A group of senior chiefs make their way to a meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper at the Langevin Block in Ottawa on Monday, Jan. 23, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov.-Gen. David Johnston attend a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012.

Harper, chiefs set course for future talks on economy

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CTV News Video

CTV National News: Ending the Indian Act
First Nations chiefs from across the country gathered in Ottawa to meet with Stephen Harper, calling for an end to the Indian Act. Daniele Hamamdjian has more on the day's events.
CTV National News: Outcome of summit
CTV's Chief Political Correspondent Craig Oliver discusses the summit and what was gained for families on reserves.
National Affairs: leaders optimistic about future
Clint Davis, the president and CEO of the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business, discusses the summit and, and whether any progress has been made.
National Affairs: Rebuilding their communities
Jody Wilson-Raybould, the AFN regional Chief in British Columbia, says many chiefs saw this summit as an opportunity to have a conversation with the prime minister about the challenges they are facing, and the solutions they have come up with.
CTV News Channel: Shawn Atleo on trust
First Nations National Chief Shawn Atleo says he understands the skepticism around the meeting, but says the summit will deliver new hope and opportunity.
CTV News Channel: Stephen Harper, part one
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the summit is about respect, rights, and opportunity for First Nations communities, and talks about how to move forward.
CTV News Channel: Stephen Harper, part two
Prime Minister Stephen Harper discusses the great accomplishments made my many First Nations people, and says the summit is an opportunity to renew the conversation as willing partners.
CTV News Channel: What changes should be made?
CTV News Channel correspondent Mercedes Stephenson sits down with Patrick Madahbee, Grand Council Chief of the Anishinabek Nation, to discuss reforms to the Indian Act.
CTV News Channel: Gov. Gen. speaks at summit
Gov. Gen. David Johnston says he is inspired and hopeful by the gathering of Aboriginal leaders and the Crown, and says they will go forward and restore the trust lost through past mistakes.
CTV News Channel: 'Harper not intent on change'
Pamela Palmater with Centre for Indigenous Governance discusses how the current system isn't working and says Harper isn't intent on substantive change.
CTV News Channel: PM: I will not scrap Indian Act
Don Martin, the host of Power Play discusses why Harper doesn't want to abolish the Indian act and says the government doesn't have the billions it would take to solve some of the First Nations' issues.
CTV News Channel: Treating with respect
Blaine Favel, former chief of the Poundmaker Cree Nation, says First Nations people and governments should be treated with respect after suffering so many consequences.

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Shawn Atleo, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, talk as they take part in the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick /  THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper delivers a speech at the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper looks on as Elder Commanda performs a smudging ceremony with Shawn Atleo, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, to open the Crown-First Nations Gathering in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper looks on as Elder Commanda performs a smudging ceremony to open the Crown-First Nations Gathering in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrives to the Crown First Nations Gathering with David Johnston, Governor General of Canada, John Duncan, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development and Shawn A-in-chut Atleo, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov.-Gen. David Johnston attend a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Prime Minister Stephen Harper attends a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. Chief Isadore Day Wiindawtegowinini of the Serpent River First Nations holds up a wampum belt which he will carry as he takes part in Tuesday's ceremony during the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Monday, January 23, 2012. The belt symbolizes the historic relationship between the Crown and First Nations. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick A group of senior chiefs make their way to a meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper at the Langevin Block in Ottawa on Monday, Jan. 23, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov.-Gen. David Johnston attend a meeting with Aboriginal leaders in Ottawa, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012.

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Shawn Atleo, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, talk as they take part in the Crown First Nations Gathering in Ottawa on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick /  THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Tue. Jan. 24 2012 10:08 PM ET

Ottawa and First Nations chiefs have agreed to a direction for future discussions after the conclusion of a day of meetings between Prime Minister Stephen Harper, senior government officials and hundreds of native leaders.

In a joint statement, the federal government and the chiefs acknowledged they have had a contentious relationship and mistakes can't be repeated.

"Unfortunately, there have been low points in our relationship. A series of misguided and harmful government policies in our past has shaken First Nations confidence in our relationship," the statement said.

"We cannot undo the mistakes of the past, but we can learn from them and affirm that they will not be repeated."

They agreed to set up task forces and working groups on issues such as economic development, and report back on the progress they've made in one year.

However, the day of talks began Tuesday with speeches showing the two sides are far apart on the future of the Indian Act.

Speaking to an audience gathered at an Ottawa conference centre, Harper said the time has come to "reset the relationship" as his government moves to update the act.

However, Shawn Atleo, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, says the act is impeding any collaboration.

"Built on the disgraceful premise of our inferiority, aimed at assimilation and the destruction of our cultures, it was a complete abrogation of the partnership between respectful nations," Atleo said in a speech directly after Harper's.

"Largely unchanged, it remains a painful obstacle to re-establishing any form of meaningful partnership."

But Harper is pushing for an incremental approach to updating the Indian Act for 21st century Canada and has no plans of repealing it all together.

"From the rules you set, come the results you get. And the incentives buried in the Indian Act self-evidently lead to outcomes that we all deplore," Harper said.

"To be sure, our government has no grand scheme to repeal or unilaterally rewrite the Indian Act. After 136 years that treaty has deep roots, blowing up the stump would just leave a big hole."

Harper, who was supposed to leave the summit shortly after his speech at about noon, ended up staying for most of the afternoon.

Clint Davis, the CEO of the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business, said Tuesday's meetings are being greeted positively.

"I've had a few discussions with some chiefs and they were cautiously optimistic about how the day has gone, particularly when talking about unlocking the economic potential of reserves," he told CTV's National Affairs from Ottawa Tuesday afternoon.

"It sounds like some chiefs are optimistic that this is a positive step forward."

But Davis says there seems to be a consensus from First Nations chiefs that the Indian Act should be scrapped.

Jody Wilson-Raybould, regional chief of British Columbia for the Assembly of First Nations, said there's apprehension from chiefs but many of them are pleased with the opportunity to put their problems and solutions before the prime minister.

"There is a need to reset the relationship, and figure out ways to engage with one another . . . to seek joint solutions to a lot of challenges," she told National Affairs.

"Through ongoing dialogue with the prime minister we establish a level of trust and a level of understanding between our leadership and the federal government."

Parliamentary Secretary of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Greg Rickford said today's meetings were an "important template."

"We're hearing the things that need to be told," he told CTV's Power Play.

Contentious legislation

The Indian Act-- defining everything from who has First Nations status, to how reserves should be managed and even the effect of marriage on status -- was last amended in 2000.

Since its passage into law in 1876, the Indian Act has given Ottawa exclusive jurisdiction over "Indians and Lands Reserved for Indians."

But there are ways, Harper said, to achieve "practical, incremental and real change" both within and outside the bounds of the act.

The government's approach, he said, would be "to replace elements of the Indian Act with more modern legislation and procedures in partnership with provinces and First Nations."

Harper's speech came as the Crown-First Nations conference -- with its ambitious agenda covering a range of long-simmering issues such as housing, education, and widespread poverty -- got underway.

"Our goal is much increased aboriginal participation in the economy and the country's prosperity. And we have no illusion about the enormous work that lies ahead of us," Harper said.

But Atleo's condemnation of the act suggested a wide chasm exists between the First Nations chiefs and the Conservative government.

"This legislation has utterly failed our people and failed Canada," Atleo said.

"Today must mark the beginning of renewal. The beginning of realizing our shared potential foretold in the visions of our ancestors. But the proof of our commitment will begin tomorrow and in the weeks and months ahead -- demonstrating that this time, this generation of leaders will not fail to make the changes that we know are urgently needed."

The speeches came after the morning's proceedings were kicked off with drums, chants and a smudge ceremony also attended by Governor General David Johnston and an assortment of approximately 170 chiefs, cabinet ministers and senior bureaucrats.

"We gather reflecting the spirit of our hearts and belief as a people," Assiniboine elder Dave Courchene said in a speech during the opening ceremony.

In his remarks a short while later, the Governor General echoing Courchene's welcoming message.

"I am inspired and I am hopeful seeing us here together," Johnston said.

In a surprise move Monday, Harper met with the chiefs for a roundtable discussion that allowed the leaders to outline their concerns and their agenda.

He and Johnston held a brief closed-door session with Atleo and other elders as they arrived at the Ottawa conference centre Tuesday morning.

Ahead of the meetings, First Nations leaders have made it clear they would like to come away with a federal commitment to address both short-term crises in their communities, as well as their longstanding relationship with Ottawa.

The meeting comes at a time of heightened tensions between the federal government and the Aboriginal community following the declaration of a state of emergency in Attawapiskat last fall.

The reserve near Timmins, Ont. drew attention for its poor living conditions, broadcast nationwide in images of dilapidated, uninsulated homes, many of them infested with mold.

That prompted the federal government to send in its own manager to take over the town, laying blame on the band and chief for mismanagement of funds.

The situation in Attawapiskat is not unique, with many other reserves complaining of similar issues.

Comments are now closed for this story

Kim in NB
said

The entire debate disappoints me. The culture of entitlement is alive and well and living on Canadian Reservations and that is shameful. It is time to cut the string.


Max
said

Scottish Descent, speak for yourself and don't presume to speak for the rest of us. Apologists like you are a big part of the problem that enables the takers in society, regardless of background. So long as native people expect special privilege and for the rest of Canadians to continue handing over tax money they don't contribute to they will not be accepted nor equal. Natives have the vote and should therefore have the same responsibility as the rest of us to pay the taxes. They have access to health care, welfare, education etc that my taxes pay for so they have the responsibility to contribute too. None of these are mentioned in the treaties so I guess if we are to go solely on what the treaties say all funding not specifically mentioned therein should be cut off! Stop living in the past, you want the benefits of todays society you pay just like I do. As for the poor living conditions, build using local materials. Pioneers did that from soddies to log cabins, with simple hand tools, get off the couch and do the same.


Polearch
said

It is time to stop the handouts on the reserves and have them work and follow all Canadian laws with no special self government. It has been to many years that they have been living off the people. Shut down the reserves!!


Non-Native
said

We need to move on from here, if they want to be at the table as an equal partner, then they need to be an equal partner! An equal partner doesn't get its funding from the other partner...that is such an ignorant statement. This is not a partnership, it never has been. When someone moves into your house, you have expectations. The person moving into your house has made promises. And if those promises are not fulfilled, you kick them out.unfortunately the peoples of the First Nations cannot kick US out or their home (land). The Canadian government needs to fulfill their promises (TREATIES)


Joyce
said

Niagara George: your statement in your comment, that PM harper left right after the speech is incorrect, I advise you to read the article again, and you will note that PM Harper did not leave he stayed for most of the afternoon after the speech..


trying to educate
said

now i come from a mixed background, i have scottish and irish as well as first nations. after 25 years im finally recongized by the canadian goverment as first nations. now i live on a reservation with my husband and our daughter, he is also first nations as well as our daughter. my husband is a fisherman for the reserve and he pays taxes, hell i even pay taxes. so you cant say natives dont pay taxes. he pays into the highest tax bracket, over 70% of his pay checks goes to the goverment. now all of my life i have put up with ignorant comments, theres too many non natives in this country who are uneducated in the situation and should really look into things before they voice their opinions. not all bands squander their fundings. another thing that bother me about the comments was some people saying we shouldnt follow the treaties because they were written so long ago by generations they no longer apply to, well if you want to do away with the treaties, why dont the goverment do away with all of the laws that were written by a different generation, why dont we do away with the human bill of rights at the same time, get the americians to do away with their constitiuon as well. i really think this is a very poor view of canadians considering a canadian wrote the decloration of human rights


Lynn
said

Colonialist attitudes still around and thriving....some of these peeps should take an INDG or Native studies course. Their ignorance proceeds them. Looks like many more Canadians need to de-colonialze their frame of thinking. We, First Nations, are unique in Canada and will continue to be. The Canadian experience is yet to evaluated. We pay taxes just like everyone else.....boo hoo to you. You can quit your crying too. Or should we see who cries louder. Prayers for these peeps.


Barry Wynn
said

PM Stephen Harper is not interested in the Indian problem i.e. how could he gut the Indian Act? Where would the [wards of the state] go if he did that. The AFN Leader i.e. Shawn Atleo would have to negotiate with PM Stephen Harper for legislation that would replace the Indian Act for something much better; my opinion, perhaps limited self-government power similar to what the French Canadians have i.e. provincial powers. Try that and see if it will work; again my personal opinion, it would work.


mark from Breslau
said

Prime Minister Harper did the right thing by staying and hearing first hand the concerns of our native leaders. These issues need to be addressed and resolved in a meaningful way that will allow our first nations people to build a better life for themselves. We as a society have the tools and resources to allow this to happen over time. What a great thing it would be if we make it possible for them to have a life the rest of us enjoy and sometimes take for granted without it being a burden on the public purse.


Thunder Spirit
said

@Dave Stewart: Now there's a good idea Dave, lets forget about all the treaties, rip them up, burn them and lets start all over So, since we are going to start over, move out of your home, return to your ancestoral country, give us back our land that was stolen, once that is all settled then you can return if you wish (peacefully of course) and we can negotiate then for what land you can have, where you can live and pay for the going price up front instead of the old empty promises. There, that sounds like a great idea.


OkiNapi
said

@Scottish decent, Born in Canada, I appload you for your comments. Education is the key to Enlightenment and Change...


Jamie
said

Would just like to point out that I, as an Aboriginal Canadian living on the Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation in Alberta, do pay taxes when I work OFF reserve. I only get tax exemption when I work on reservation lands. It is also a fact that our tax exemption on gasoline and cigarettes is only valid on the reservation with a valid tax exemption card. We have limits to what we may use that card for each week. I also pay GST just like the rest of you when I shop off reserve (this is like 99% of the time). Also, I'm pretty damn sure that reserve owned companies also pay income tax. I could be wrong but I read that somewhere. Just to clear up some misconceptions about the tax exemption thing.


Dawn
said

Ron So true


Roxy
said

Shawn Atleo is to be commended for accurately describing the impact of the Indian Act on the history Of the First Nations Peoples ... Yes , the Dept. of Indian Affairs , through the public school system , has systematically crushed the influence of native elders , taught "White' values to Indian children , divided Indian prople from one another ... and most damaging , destroyed the continuation of their inherent languages . . .


Robert
said

It's come time for equality! No more handouts. One set of laws for all Canadians. Everyone including big corp. need to pay the same % tax.




George V.
said

The natives would like to see self governance of their own self formed nation with it's own laws , on lands yet to be determined, funded by all the working tax payers of Canada. Governed solely by them, A nation within a nation one being the funder, the other being the consumer. One being the giver the other being the taker.and whenever funds run out just make the other side cough up some more. This system should satisfy at least one side.


Paul ~ Kitchener
said

The late Pierre Elliot Trudeau said it correctly when he was Prime Minister. I quote " Who signed those treaties - England - then go after England for settlement. Only treaties signed after 1867 Confederation are binding on Canada. These issues will never be solved under ancient treaties pre confederation. Both sides have issues that neither will discuss ~ SO !!!!!


FCS
said

Wanting accountability and results for the money being spent on the First Nations is not racist. Keep breaking out the r word over a perfectly resonable request and resonable people will stop listening to what you have to say.


Danny Dinosaur
said

Another example of how Prime Minister Harper's wisdom can unite our great country. He is a disaster to all Canadians. Native, non-native - everyone. His divide and conquer strategy is truly a sign of his weak leadership. Look through history and see which other well known leaders used a strategy of dividing people and punishing one side. Mr. Harper, you will be an entire chapter in future history books and it will not be a good chapter. The posters on here can tell their grand children that they were foolish enough to vote for the man. Never in my lifetime has this country been so poorly managed.


Doug
said

Being proud of your ancestry is not something only for aboriginals; I for one am of Irish ancestry and my Grandparents also added to the success of Canada as a country through the past century. We however are also proud of being Canadian do not dwell in the past.

Here's looking forward to the same from other groups; we are not and cannot function as individual "Nations".


GHW
said

Just like the Palestinians, as long as these native chiefs are in total control and hold onto their absolutism they will never get their people out of the poverty they are in. It is in the chief's financial interest to keep the status quo. Additionally any treaty signed by a bunch of opportunistic Europeans hundreds of years ago is not valid today. These treaties are only as lasting as the generation who signed them. The best course forward for the native people is to work with Harper. He is as fair and smart a person as you will ever meet. Good luck and God bless.


Aboriginal and proud of it!!!
said

I am pretty sure I personally have earned it along with MANY other Aboriginals. People just have a tendency to stereotype us and think we are all the same. The people part of this meeting are people that want change for the better.


Scottish descent, Born in Canada
said

I apologize to First Nations peoples on behalf of the ignorant non-Native peoples commenting on this board. Please don't assume all non-Native people think alike or even conservative voters for that matter. I am truly sorry for the uneducated, thoughtless stupidity displayed here.


Joeb'n
said

@ woman from six nations:Yes. It is common knowledge that no other culture, European or otherwise, knew how to hunt or fish before migrating to North America.


Zack
said

Anyways when comes to requesting funds for the Natives, there's always a problem such as no related program, no funding program but yet, INAC is proud to announce they have a big surplus. Sometimes INAC agents just tell you that they have no authorization to negotiate. Another thing, INAC must be a department for employees waiting to retire.


Mike from Stand-Off
said

I totally agree with Geoff From Lethbridge just give us back the 50,000 square miles that the government took from the BlackFoot confedracy and we can get along great with out the federal Government and the Province of Alberta we are very capable of governing our own we won't need any hand-outs; the rest of you go back to where you came from and leave us alone.


Time for Change
said

@Six Nations man: Wouldn't living in a high rise be better than living in a cardboard box? And what is wrong with living in a high rise? Doesn't mean you are like cattle, I live in a high rise in the city and don't think of myself as "cattle". And Canada has been paying its debts, those millions of dollars every year paid to each reserve isn't small change. Free education, no taxes if on reserve etc. all cost Canada money. Canada has been paying for years and years. If there are no benefits received for that money, then talk to your chiefs, they are in charge of the spending. Its time for Natives to stand up and better their own situation, part of that is changing the Indian Act, and part of it is everyone needs to stop playing the blame game and work together. Time to move forward instead of always looking backwards at the wrongs done, that just makes people victims instead of taking charge of their own lives for the good of everyone.


Dave Stewart
said

It is time to throw away the treaty and start over again, this was written hundreds of years ago and does not make any sense now. Why should we be paying them $8,000,000.000 a year to live whithout paying any taxes. They should hsve to go out and get a job and pay taxes just like the rest of us. They say we stole their land and yet they were wondering people never staying in one spot so it was nbot there land.


Joe Canadian
said

What we should have done was taken the land back then and been done with it. Now, we are stuck giving out piles of money for all time. Get off your butts, join the 21st century and get to work.


Mary/Orleans
said

How come they do not show us the 249 yr old contracts/treaties that were signed, love to read them on the Internet.


bonsauvage
said

I think the most IMPORTANT point is that Canada's First Nations are the fastest growing and youngest population within the country. This means that they are the future workforce in Canada. Do you people who have negative opinions honestly think that these children are going to be able to better Canada without the same level of education as other non-Indigenous people?? Please stop your ignorance and become informed. And by informed I don't mean making your own assumptions on information that you don't really understand. It's like a non-indigenous person telling immigrants to go back to their own land...excuse me, but aren't you or your family immigrants as well? Not to mention that Canadians are not having enough children to actually contribute to growth of the population, so immigrants and First Nations people are the future of Canada...ponder that for a bit you might change your tune...they are the future for this country NOT you. It's time for us to work together. If you disagree that is your opinion no matter how wrong it is.


Seeking Wolf
said

Aboriginal and PROUD of it!!!!!!!!....wants respect. Respect is earned. Earn it. that is YOUR responsibility.


Doug
said

It is apparent that we must do away with the Indian Act over a specified period of time after which the people involved with be Canadians in all ways and we will all be equal.

Without this change these meetings and the rhetoric continue with no resolve or change.


Seeking Wolf
said

Rick, you will find that those who chose to leave the res, like i did, cannot change anything because the chiefs and councils have absolute control over the band lands. Until that changes, there can be no change for the better. They are not willing to give up their petty power over our people. As for those who are shrieking their misplaced racial guilt over all this, GROW UP and stop being stupid.


D in Calgary
said

I don't know what the solution is, but Indian leadership is widely corrupted by business. I have watched a major Dutch oil company cut a check to a chief simply because he wrote a letter demanding a sum of money to satisfy disturbed dead ancestors. This is precisely how things get done in the west when the native are involved, and among the many reasons I left this company.


woman from six nations
said

@Geoff in Lethbridge: ARE you kidding me...take away our native rights to hunt and fish? Why? How does that even make sense to this all? Guess who taught your ancestors to hunt and fish? Guess who was eating biscits and starving? Your people were! Hunting and fishing has not only been in our cultural for hundreds and hundreds of years, it's apart of who we are. Your people are filling the lakes and rivers with chemicals, not us. Your people are the ones using guns to kill. My family and inlaws still hunt and fish every season to this day. We do not use it for commercial purposes, we use it to eat, feed our children and ourselves instead of eating Mcdonalds and other meat that is filled with unnecessary chemicals which makes you sick and overweight. Clearly your statement was out of jealousy!


Six Nations man
said

I am tired of hearing from those who think we are getting handouts from the Gov't. TRUTH is YOU have not paid your bills. because TREATIES were signed a long time ago does not give you the right to ignore them.
One of the most bizarre suggestions is that a high -rise be built to provide living quarters for the whole tribe.What are we ..Cattle ?


B in Calgary
said

By the time that I made it to this article, there were already over 80 comments. How often do we ever see that many comments on a single story? It is obvious that it is a very complicated issue. One that our government has the unfortunate responsibility to try and rectify. Following the current treaties is not going to help anyone. As well, instead of complaining about our government "honouring" the historical treaties... it is time for the Chiefs to embrace change and work together with the government to try and pave a brighter future for "their people". The sense of entitlement on some of the reserves is not just astounding... it is embarrassing. Having spent time on a few reserves in the capacity of an auditor, any suggestion that they need additional funds in order to "clean up" is ludicrous. Also ludicrous is the suggestion that it is the governments fault for the actions of the individuals that continue to live in those conditions. They need to become accountable and morally responsible for their current actions, as well as their future. That said... how many of us want to welcome the problems that they are facing on the reserves into our communities? It's obviously a very complicated issue, and anyone that thinks that there is a simple answer is just as naive as those that think that they should continue to live off of the "social welfare" of this country.


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

@ Niagara George: You're quite mistaken, George; I have NEVER argued that the G8/G20 expenditure (which actually equaled $664M according to our AG, significantly less than the $1.1B the Liberals and NDP officially approved during the Conservatives' minority parliamentary tenure) was taxpayer money well spent. Indeed, we can debate whether Canada needs to spend money on certain "other" things (ie. fighter planes). However, I stand by my point that essentially throwing money at our First Nations issue(s), as I firmly believe the "Kelowna Accord" did, isn't a real and genuine solution, it merely represents a political bandaid to a fundamental structural governmental problem. We can do better, and must. That, I think, we agree on. Thanks, George.


sarah
said

Nobody says we want to be like Canadians, Nobody says we want to be like you's. We are nothing like you's. We have scars that are still open, we have a history of tragedy, and you's have a history of disease, murder, abuse, cheating, lying and greed!We want to be treated with respect, just like we treated your people when your people came over here on your ships! We want to have partnership with your people. Exactly like the wampum belt shows, your people are on one side of the river, our side on the other. We must travel along the river but must never cross one another. Learn some more history you Canadians. In the war we helped your people with, our men were put in the front line.


randy
said

I think harper is opening a can of worms up bigger than he can handle .



Mick
said

@Niagra George. This government and any future governments will be held to account for whatever money is spent. They must always prove that they are justified in spending such money. The Kelowna Accord was a desperate plee for votes by liberal Paul Martin. The liberals were held to account and voted out. All the Kelowna Accord was going to do was toss more money at the problem. That solution has not worked in the last 100 years, why would it now.


Thunder Spirit
said

@NVancity: What treaties in Europe and how they were followed and or broken is Europe's problem, not ours. The treaties signed here had to do with land and the white settlers and aboriginals to work together in peace, to do trade and business. However these treaties were broken, land was stolen, they were rounded up like cattle and moved to far off reaches of the country by force. Many were taken from their families, sent to boarding schools, stripped of their traditions and languages, sexually abused, killed and on and on and on the wrongs go. The racism and sterotyping the aboriginal has had to endure here in their own country over the centuries, even to this day has got to stop. Hopefully a corner can be turned and the wrongs made right.


Marge
said

These reserves are dictatorships in Canada. The only people benefitting are the chiefs and there families - that's where the money goes to. Everybody else lives in poverty. Split the land and give to all natives currently living on the reserve. In future it is there land - if they want to sell it they can sell it. They need to fend for themselves. Self respect comes from what you accomplish - when you are given everything - you have no purpose. Stop it - it is for there own good. It is time for the government to quit supporting them. They need to live like every other Canadian - work for your money. Pay for products just like everyone else - stop the tax breaks. We are all Canadians.


Canadian Bob
said

Right On Niagara George! You took the words right out of my mouth!


reidjr
said

Kansas Stake If this was just about funding for city services i think most would be fine with that but the thing is on some cases natives don't feel they have to work and the state should take care of them.


reidjr
said

Niagara George Sure you can do the easy thing and say cut the arms budgets etc thats the easy thing to do might not be right but its easy the thing Canada does spend what about $30 billion a year on immergration why not cut that in half and give $15 billion to the natives.


Niagara George
said

@ Prof. Pye Chartt: $5B is equal to four G20 weekends. You have argued that was money well spent. Don't tell us now that $5B spread over 10 years is a "fat pile of money." The peace brought by the Kelowna Accord would be far more beneficial to Canada and all Canadians than 10- years worth of G20 weekends and far better for us than the 8 or 10 F-35's it could buy. That's another foolish expense you and your mis-guided right-wing friends support. The only time Harper has "demonstrated rational intelligence on the Conservatives' part," was when he didn't bring in the changes to the banking laws that he pleaded for, when in opposition. Thankfully!


Brent
said

Here's the new relationship: you will be treated as Canadians, like everyone else in this country. All of your lands as of today and based on the treaties will remain yours, but all future monthly cheques aside from regular welfare and EI will be terminated effective immediately. You will be expected to integrate. Period.


Jamie D
said

Do Canadians want to back out of the deal they made with the Indians (and the Canadians thought that the shiny beads was the only enticement to living on the reserve until the end of time).

So your great great great great grandparents were greedy and didn't think the deal through to the end of the deal. they only thought it through to the end of their greedy little lives. They left you with having to deal with paying back the deal without getting any of the gains.

Gee this sounds like the environment file, and the great great grandparents are you.

Deals last centuries. Human life not so. Now how you gonna act? Gonna live for today or for the future?


NVancity
said

Why is there this perception that a treaty is some immutable object that once created can never be changed? You don't see people in Europe getting in a huff over how the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht is no longer in tact. How about the Treaty of Versailles? Everyone was glad to be rid of that one.


reidjr
said

Aboriginal and PROUD of it!!!!!!!!
As for you comment if there was a issue with the white man it would be all over the news no thats not true at all there are many issues from hospitals to food banks to social services that are getting very little media play.


Mick
said

It's time for people like William Big Bull and Seeking Wolf (bloggers here) to step up and make some changes for their people. First Nation people will not listen to me, the white man. Many Chiefs need to be held accountable, if not abolished, and quit asking for more money. Money that has only gone to line their own pockets. The system breeds corruption. Close the reserves that are unsustainable. I'm not talking about loss of land claim, only to people who can never expect to make a living off their respective reserves They MUST be self sustaining. Integrate into the 21st century and quit squabbling about the past. None of us were alive 240 years ago. Lets look to the future. I am a sixth generation Canadian, but am no more Canadian than any other citizen of this country, including natives.


Kansas Stake
said

Some taxpayers claim that the native are asking for handouts..when most towns and cities get funding for services provided to the public..same goes for the native communities...and the so called royal proclamation took away the lands of the native people...disregarding their claim of the land...since then trillions of dollars were made over these lands that were taken away from the natives...what has been done to compensate their loss


Island Man
said

Time for the melting pot system to be put in place in Canada. We have too many 'nations' ...take note of what's happening in Holland as they announce moving away from their multicultural society model next year. All citizens should be equal, vote and pay taxes. Individual cultures can be celebrated and maintained without funding from the general population. We need to work with the First Nations people towards being citizens, not partners.


Alan
said

How many non-aborigional people believe that Harper, a politician, to do what is best for all Canadians? (Judging from these comment boards, there is a wide variety of opinions on this)In the same manner....How many aborigional people trust their chiefs, who are politicians, to do what is best for all they represent? Just curious


Saskmike
said

@ Ron. I'm part Algonquin Indian, very proud. I could be on the reservation...no, collect my fair due...no, watch the Chief and relitives recieve the lions share....no. I chose a life that I made for myself and now the family I help build. Your choice will always be in the past. Sorry for you.


Lori
said

@Ron. I don't owe you anything. I was BORN to this country. Living here is MY right also. I don't know you, I have done nothing to you. You were born here the same as me and you deserve nothing more than me. Your sense of entitlement is astounding.


Thunder Spirit
said

The first nations people are entrenched in the Canadian Constitution. It is time that the government, private sector and other institutions of this country begin to recognize that. Treaties have been signed in the 1600's, 1700's, 1800's and not many of them have been honoured. It is time to make the wrongs right again and to help the first nations people chart a new course.


len from alberta
said

What was wrote 120 years ago should be scraped an they should go to work like every other canadian does .We as canadians should not have to fund an pay all your bills and biuld you homes every two years because u wreck them.Time for a change .


Capt. Compromise
said

Well, another fine speech by Steven Harper. Now the real question is: Will he take the usual "it's my way so take a hike" approach, followed by the appointment of some commissioner and his staff being overpaid to do nothing but look pretty? Or actual positive action? Oh my, what a surprise that would be!


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

@ Niagara George: The "Kelowna Accord" amounted to another misguided left-wing idea of throwing a fat pile of money at a problem in order to solve it ($5B over 10 years). It lacked focus and targeted expenditures, administrative monitoring and proper accounting, and failed to address the need (profoundly evident today) for systemic reform. Scrapping it demonstrated rational intelligence on the Conservatives' part. Thanks.


Ron
said

Amidst your anger and your aganst,I ask for your understanding. What does the average person in this country really know about the Canadian-First Nation relationships ? How much of what we think we know is so distorted that makes our positions invalid .In Ontario very little is provided to our children who then grow up misinformed and thereby develop stereotypical ideas of FN peoples.
So the first thing is to become knowledgable of what you speak.For example, The Six Nations of Grand River has been in the last five years paying taxes more than double the amount it receives from the Gov't. Who is supporting whom?
We don't want anything from you that you do not owe us by our treaty rights.We want you to pay your bill and get out of our way.Don't say that you are sick of giving us handouts ! these are merely down payments on what you owe ! (last estimates were pegged at 82 billion dollars )


John
said

Comment to Walking Brave Eagle: What you suggest will never satisfy or settle with Canadians. You want to be a Nation of your own with Canada supplying the land and the money, without what you would term as, interefence of any sort. That is actually racist. Look at it this way we are not Indians and others, we are all just human beings who have to be responsible for our own well being.


tony k
said

I've heard stories of funds from the federal government being given to First Nations Bands to help out on an assortment of social issues & that money never finding it's way to those purposes. If those funds are being misappropriated into other things that are not for the improvement of everyone within the band, but only to the select few at the top,reworking the Indian Act may prevent graft and corruption and that I support. If reworking the Indian Act means violating the rights & terms of treaties written long ago, I do not support re-writing the act.


Lev-Tov ZOHAR
said

I am so proud of SEEKING WOLF. He and I are brothers, having worn green in the military and serving our land of Canada and the common nation of Canadian people. Our ancestors came to this land, every one of them. The first group walked. Study human history. We all came from Mother Africa. We all live together, as one race; the human race. We all share this large spaceship, Mother Earth, hurling through the universe. We get to chose our future. We can let go of the past that harms us.


Jon in Burlington
said

Canada's native peoples should be ashamed of them selves . Here they are again asking for more handouts as if we don't give enough [8-9 BILLION] and with no accountability. It is time we made these Chiefs and their minions accountable to their own tribe and let them know what they did with the monies allocated to that tribe.I am beyond fed-up with the aboriginals always wanting to blame the white guys for their ills, alcoholism, drop out ratio, poor housing, unemployment and the list goes on. Mindy open your eyes and see what the rest of us CANADIAN TAX PAYERS SEE


Fortunate
said

I am fortunate enough to work with two indivuduals that are the most hard working trustworthy individuals I know. The both happen to be native, so painting all natives with one brush is not fair. On the other hand, we, the "white man" have created an enviroment where alot of natives feel they are forced to live the way they do....that's our fault. Natives as a society aren't blameless either. The gov't provides may opportunites for those natives that want out, want to get a education, and live life differently. Many choose not to....they'd rather complain and ask for more handouts. I, as a taxpayer, am getting tired of it. I too am a "native" Canadian, albeit a "white" one...


Jamie
said

NDP Aboriginal Affairs Critic Linda Duncan said she was skeptical the meetings could achieve much. However, she said she was impressed by the chiefs.Linda Duncan NDP critic on the chiefs coming to Ottawa - "And these chiefs are still willing to, on their own money, come out here and sit down and still try to be nation to nation, that's pretty remarkable."Their own money? What planet are you from Linda Duncan?


collins
said

More European settlers were moving onto the Prairies at an alarming rate, and, as they moved westward, they displaced Aboriginals from their land.

The buffalo had virtually disappeared from this region as well, and other big game animals like deer were not as plentiful. Therefore, more and more Aboriginals were now facing starvation.

Diseases like smallpox were effectively wiping out Aboriginal nations.


Treaty's were created for this exact reason. A treaty is just like a contract, and needs to be honored. As a member of the fist nations community, i can say first hand that there is a constant stereo type about our people. I am sorry to burst anyone's bubble, but our people are not waiting for handouts we are waiting for change so we can begin our healing. We lack proper leadership to help us move forward and guide us with the Integration into mainstream society. It really is all about change and learning to stand on our own two feet. And i honestly Believe in time this will happen. I just wish sometimes people were not so racist and judgmental.


Pip
said

Aboriginal and PROUD of it!!!!!!!! is right: far too much time is spent perpetuating the stereotype. What is also overlooked is that some of these successful ones go back to reserves and serve as examples of what may be done. I applaud all those who succeed and work to get others to succeed.


Niagara George
said

As reported on CTV news, last night, Harper pulled a fast one on the chiefs, yesterday. He called them in for a 10 minute meeting with very little advanced notice. Today, he made a speech and left. That doesn't sound like a leader who is interested in negotiations. As per his normal pattern, King Steve is interested in making proclamations and little else. Just remember, the Liberals had a deal to ammend the Indian Act that would have been beneficial to both sides. The Cons squashed that agreement and the chaos has continued to worsen under their watch.


One of many !!!
said

I live in a 55yr old house, although not a dream house, it's CLEAN & functional, and i'm NOT asking for a new one every 5yrs !!
WHY cant these people do the same ??????


Just Saying - Ottawa
said

A big step would be for the Chiefs to STOP manipulating their own people but at the same time want change when they themselves are in charge of their own, cannot have it both ways. Everyone needs to work together in order to get ahead.


jrayj
said

Wow, same old story and the same old complaint by Natives in this country they blew all the Billions the government gave them over the hundred years or so, and now they need Billions more to blow nothing has really changed here, because it takes jam to tell the natives that the party is over, because we do not have a government to call them on it. PS. I have listened to all their complaints now for over 70 years so you better get used to it because it's not going to change any time soon.


CMQ
said

Equality truely defined would mean all people of Canada being educated, working and contributing to our great nation. Wanting more handouts because of past issues is not equality. It is time to stop the reserves, stop the payments and begin to live in the 21st century plain and simple. Fact is, if you continue to give people money etc without it being earned or taking responsibility people will not become responsible. The last century has proven this loud and clear.


Geoff in Lethbridge
said

First Nations people need to fully integrate into Canadian society and economy, while embracing and celebrating their heritage like any other group in Canada (e.g. Ukrainian, German, Japanese, etc.). Their youth carry cell phones and iPods, they should also be attending school and not skipping, getting good grades and not drifting along. No more aboriginal hunting/fishing rights except if they only live subsistence and not for commercial gain. Set a cut-off- those born before 1965 have old rights, those born 1965-1994 have "transitional status", those born 1995 or later have no aboriginal rights, just normal Canadian rights. Let's raise them out of the paternalistic, socialistic welfare state and let them be our equals.


Sniffles
said

I cried when I think about the history of the First Nations People and how my ancestors played a role in their demise, however, there has to be some accountability. Neither the First Nations government nor the Federal Government are doing anything to stop the perpetuation of mis-management of funds, abuse and stereotyping of the First Nations people. Treaties need to be rewritten for relevancy and proper government or abolished altogether. There is no quick fix, but it's time both sides take accountability and work towards a feasible solution.


Tim
said

hey North bay, shake yor head, Canada wasn't built on treaties. Its was built by the hard work and sacrifice of the pioneers who came here. Shame on you for being so twisted.


Mike
said

Give them what we promised, Relocate to an area where better chance of being self sufficient and can build competitive industry/business. If they don't want to relocate, where they will have better chance at being self sufficient and protest against their own leaders when things aren't getting done, then what else can we do? The Natives complain that we didn't monitor the whole situation, but in next breath tell us to stay out of their business. That sounds like leave us alone to do what we want, but if we fail, it's your fault, and we expect more help. The Government doesn't come running to rescue me if I fail. There are a lot of Natives who have done very well in life, maybe it's time for them to jump in and explain how to be successful, or at least live a normal life. If they won't listen to their own, how do we get through to them without them crying foul?


David Fraser Nanoose Bay BC
said

If the First Nations people want equality, I am all for it. Stop giving them taxpayers money, have them pay their fair share in taxes and put some responsibility on them to fend for themselves, just like the rest of us. Giving the Bands money has created this welfare state and taken away their initiative to become productive members of our society.


Henry
said

A first step would be to eliminate the chief system, that siphons the money into their pockets and away from the people!


Aboriginal and PROUD of it!!!!!!!!
said

Good luck.. My thoughts, good vibes and prayers are with you. Being Aboriginal is something to be PROUD of and I am Proud to be an educated, Aboriginal young woman and mother. We are standing up for OUR Equal rights. There is an issue with our communities and it needs to be addressed and hopefully this can help. If it were an issue with the "white" man, it would be all over the news faster than a fly on feces. remember that) Nobody ever talks about all of us Aboriginals that do graduate school, go to universtiy, college, get a great job, raise families. All you hear about is the negative. STOP judging all of us on that percentage. There are so many good aboriginal people out there, so with all of your negative comments in regards to this meeting that is being held, I think you are just scared and being ignorant, we pay taxes JUST LIKE YOU, respect us like you want to be respected!! GOOD LUCK Chiefs...


Grumpy Ol Man
said

Time to act should have been 100 years ago.





Max
said

The 1st change needed is responsibility on both sides. Natives will not achieve acceptance when they are always there with their hands out expecting the taxpayers to bail them out. The government needs to treat the natives with the same respect as other groups. The second is to recognise that 250 yr old treaties are not applicable today. Most treaties include the provision of no vote, this has been struck down. If you have the vote you have the responsibility to support the institutions of the government and that means paying taxes. As for the poverty on reserves, if you live there and live in the same fashion as 250 yrs ago there is no poverty. Unfortunately the attitude is I want my stuff and your stuff too. Fence sitting has always been problematic. There is work on reserves, people could build homes and repair them using local materials for example, but instead choose not to. As an army brat I have seen native communities from coast to coast. The overwhelming attitude is give me, provide for me while I hate you and do nothing to help myself. If you want self government, take responsibility and pay for it yourselves!


the bradguy
said

We want abolishment of the Indian Act, not harper's "changes" or "rewrites" to it. The Indian Act is the paternalistic, outdated, colonial system that the gov't wants to keep to keep us subjugated. You Canadians who keep complaining why do the Canadian tax-payers have to foot the bill; it's because your gov't wants to keep this racist, sexist Act alive and won't let us be free by abolishing it.


Gregory Wollf
said

Good on ya Mr. Harper, you didn't have to make these efforts but you did and you are unlike any that came before you. It's the right thing to do. Undoing the tyranny of history will be a difficult and frightening challenge. I don't know what it will look like in the future but the issue needs to be addressed.


hawkeye
said

Ante up on the mineral and land rights owed to native Canadians and they would be quite capable of financing and running their own affairs.It is absolutely stunning how the same crowd who are for letting foreign multi-nationals loot natural resources,for minuscule royalty fees,blame natives for their poverty when the greed in the corporate world is the evil here.As for this get together nothing more than a Harper messaged photo op.Native Americans are in bad need of new leadership instead of the current crop who seem tickled pink at another PM kicking the can down the road.


Ottawa Jack
said

Never read about any donations, aid or volunteers that came from any First Nations people tp Attawapiskat.. Does this mean that AFN was just content to, once again, blame the federal government for everything while not helping their own?? Just wondering because ........


J.C.
said

It is long past time for the reservations to be closed and the aboriginals integrated into our society so they can make a better life for themselves. No longer should they be separated from the rest of Canada. No longer should money be given to the Chief's for dispursement. If money is given then do so on an individual basis, or tax reduction and allow them ownership of their own homes. Make a land settlement and dispurse the money individually. If they wish to reside in the same areas then form their own elected municipal governments as the rest of us do and pay their municipal taxes to support it. Allow them to have pride in their heritage as the rest of us do. Allow them the opportunity to grow and become prosperous self sufficient individuals. It is time for real change including the Indian Act which may have been good a few hundred years ago but extremely outdated for todays modern society. No more reserves for these proud peoples. No more handouts. They must move forward as some of the tribes have already done and continue to do. These tribes are proud of their individual accomplishments and certainly should be. We should all join together and be one Canada not separated by "nations within". We must all move forward and take pride in our country for it certainly is something to be proud of!


merlin
said

I see this comment is bring out the native comments give /give / give ---Get Natives off reserves they are all in cities anyways so why reserves--they do not want to live there and neither would I--a lot of money is spent for reserves where you cannot get into unless by plane or winter roads is that wasted money --most natives come to cities to hospitals--so get rid of reserves--why does it take so long to figure this out


Ian Ottawa
said

The way I see it is that the Government itself would lose jobs and Ministers if they got the Natives to join society and they certainly wouldn't want that. Lets look at the savings to the tax payer if there were no more Minister of Indian Affairs and the Department of Indian Affairs. The whole dependance of the Aboriginal people may eventually go by the wayside. The First Nations people could marry into the Canadian population and not be forced to be segregated on a reserve so the Old Ways could be honoured. The real reason for reserves is to segregate these people and to give power to the Elders but we all are so afraid of offending or being politically correct as young people are abused or forgotten or end up in jail out of rebellion or frustration.


TJR
said

We are one nation with one government. This is supposed to be an equal rights country. so give them the same rights as everyone else. and the same RESPONSIBILITES as everyone else.


MikeInBC
said

Crows Feet re your comment about the government helping Immigrants...I am an immigrant. I came to Canada in 1955, a year after my father, with my mother and sister when I was 13 years old. My dad had to work for a year here to save enough money for my mother, my sister and I to move to Canada. We lived in poverty for years. Both my mother and my father worked. I always had at least one part time job while attending school. I helped support the family. At one time I had 3 jobs; a morning paper route, I worked at a bowling alley setting up pins in the afternoon after school and then I had another paper route in the evening. Then I went home and did my school homework. Over time we pulled ourselves up out of poverty and had successful lives I live close to and travel through reserves frequently now. I don't see the kind of work ethic on these reserves that I just described. I really think that many (not all) aboriginal people need to drop the belief that Canadians need to give them more money so that they can rise out of poverty. In my opinion the aboriginals need to do what we did...work yourself out of the mud.


GHW
said

The world is in a constant state of change and life is generally never fair. That’s just the way it is. One has to role with it or get run over by it. I was born here and so were my parents. We fought and shed blood in world wars for our country, for our children. We sacrificed through hard work and blood to build this country up to what it is today. I am proud to be a Canadian. It is our country, our land. We are not Native or European, we did not settle this land a thousand years ago or 300. We are all Proud Canadians. The native people can either move forward together, with us, as Candians, or they can live in the past, as Natives, in a vain attempt to restore a way of life that will never return or worse yet, live as extortionists and thugs. Before Europeans came to this land the Natives struggled and worked to survive. This is the way life is supposed to be, has to be. Suffering and struggling is not a bad thing when there is a way to work your way out of the mess. The people in Attawapiskat should have got off their butts, rallied the troops and solved their own problems. I believe they could have done it if given the chance.


Mark
said

Walking Brave Eagle are you actually serious. "what is needed is self governance, more reliable transfer payments and no accountants snooping around in first nations affairs". So keep giving first nations money and dont ask questions. Isnt that why first nations continue to struggle? Corruption.... What first nations need is more educated people to run the affairs of the band in the best interest of the band.


Redfern
said

I disagree with Seeking Wolf, he has no knowledge of what is going on in native communities. He says so himself since he left in 1940. Alot of the problems faced with Native communities stems from bureaucracy or lack of effort from the Government. Treaties or agreements are binding responsibilities of the Government but does not always honor them.


White Devil
said

Wasn't it part of the treaties that the natives would be moved to reservations ... And stay there? Both sides need to uphold their part of these treaties ... as they were written, not "interpreted".


Taxes payer
said

Either one is fully part of this country and thus are bound by all responsibilities and obligations as all other Canadians are OR continue to claim to be completely "independent" but should cease to ask for any money.Cannot continue be a "FIRST OF THE MONTH" nation. Either your part of something bigger with all rights and obligations (which do not remove anything even identity) OR you're on your own and stop getting BS and social aids.


Ted
said

Aboriginals in Canada have had over one hundred years to get on with it. Government charity is what is keeping our fellow Canadians un-motivated and poverty stricken. Every opportunity afforded to Aboriginals [grant after grant after grant], to really change your OWN fortunes and destiny......... and all you are willing to come up with is CASINO and BINGO?


non-native north bay
said

Canada was built on treaties, don't like it. Move.


Missy N.B
said

You cant just throw out the indian act. it doesnt work that way, this is a way that the government is controling large group of people. Treaties are a contract, plain and simple, when a contract is not fulfilled action is brought against the person(s) that are not upholding their end. This is what is happening. as for all you posters that are racist, cause that is the only way you come off, should know there is documentation, that goes far back. but you wouldnt know that because you are not educated in that area of history. It is sad that in a country like canada that we have people on here that dont know our history.


Gilbert in Orleans
said

Keep pinching myself to try to wake up from a nightmare. Yes Natives got a raw deal from the time the French and English landed on the coasts of America in the 16th Century. That was about 400 years ago. There has to be a time where these people start taking responsibility for their destiny and stop blaming the past. Walking around with this "the world owes me" attitude will not get them anywhere or any sympatie. We need to move on from here, if they want to be at the table as an equal partner, then they need to be an equal partner! An equal partner doesn't get its funding from the other partner...


Small Braid - Ottawa
said

In this day and age it is time to move on and not live in the past. Get doing whatever it takes to get things done and both sides have to meet in the middle, cannot all be onesided.


Barry Wynn
said

Yep, yep! It looks like the Canadian Government is guilty of child abuse and neglectfulness. Yep! Yep!


Crows Feet
said

The aboriginals in this country have been trodden underfoot for generations. Landclaims go ignored, the toxic environments on the reserves are a result of years of abuse and isolation. I like Bill do also believe if the first nations wish to move forward they are going to have to stop living in the past, but the government of this country needs to step up to the plate as well as the provincial governments. If anyone in this country has suffered from neglect and racism it is the first nations people and I find it hard to swallow sometimes how our government will bend over backwards to help immigrants or refugee's to this country and make sure that they are looked after, but ignore the plight of our own first nations people, the very people who help build this country.


Chief Yellow Beard
said

The Grand Chief of First Nations is wearing the ceremonial pointed hat in celebration of this Great Apology. I look forward to Canada finally respecting all the promises they made centuries ago.


Marisha
said

The Blood reserve (southern Alberta) and their Chief Weaselhead are a perfect example of what First Nations people can do for themselves when they put their minds to it. They're making a living from agriculture, making pre-fab homes on the reserve. Children are in school with the principal determined to see their kids graduate. Adults are taking classes as well.

Chief Weaselhead is a University Graduate and emphasizes that the Blood people have to help THEMSELVES to end the harsh conditions on the reserve, not wait for government hand outs.

This situation just goes to show there are success stories out there.

Kudos to the Chief for being a REAL leader for his First Nations people!

Marisha




moralist
said

These "First nations" people have been living of off taxpayers funds for generations. What we have is a cultural and social genocide going on because living of off handouts leads to a system of poverty and dependence. Along with this comes an attitude by the leaders of these people of a right to bully and intimidate the bulk of Canadians whenever the opportunity presents itself and any attempt to deal with this angry attitude is met with calls of racism. The First nations talk of spiritual harmony with nature but this attitude is incongruent with the behaviour the leadership display towards their own people living in abject poverty and the rest of us Canadians. Time for them to grow up. I hope Harper has the resolve and determination to stand up to these attitudes


Tim
said

Look at developing countries (China, India, Brazil, etc.) around the world, their leaders and people have the will, determination, diligence, and integrity to make life and better. Sadly, the native leaders missed the marks and failed to deliver to their people so many times over a loooooooooooooong period of time. You wonder why the natives kept failing behind?


Mr. Taxpayer
said

"The situation in Attawaspiskat is not unique...." Well, that's the truth! But it still doesn't answer for the missing $90 million! FN have received billions in payments over the years along with freedom from taxation and yet they never progress. Where is that $90 million by the way? I recall when I was a young man that the Penticton FN sold a strip of land between Skaha Lake and Okanagan Lake for $7 million. After the "white man" put in roads, sewers, hydro and built hotels, etc. the land value increased. The local FN band then said they were "ripped off by the white man" . They sued for the increased value of the land and were awarded another $7 million by our socialist leaning, politically correct court system. Now the same FN band has that very same strip of land under a "FN land claim". The "white man" bought and paid for the same piece of land twice, and now, the FN band wants to reclaim that very same piece of land as their native land. Explain that to us lowly "second class, white, taxpayers" ?


Robbie
said

The original people of this land do pay taxes! For all you ignorant ones who think we don't, the numbers do not lie! Native brothers and sisters contribute much more to taxes than the government of canada provides our communities! We weren't even considered human beings by the canadian government until recently! Must I say more! Nyaweh!


Mark
said

I completely agree with disbanding all reserves. There is no reason why Natives cannot live and work in normal Canadian society. I am sick of listening to people whine about honoring a treaty from 249 years ago. Do you really thing when the treaty was signed that Natives on reserves would be such a huge economic drain on the rest of the country. Would the treaty have been signed knowing that a simple home repairs cannot be done by the owner? It is truly disgusting that the government must babysit all reserves and do everything for them. Time to be adults and grow up.


URU
said

Our Gov't needs to tackle this URGENTLY. The First Nation's People need NEW housing that are actually livable not cheaply built garbage bins that the Gov't thinks is home. The reserves DOES NOT have adequate or the essentials for anyone to live. There is a serious Human Rights violations on the First Nations People.


Brian Fr Langley
said

Tax and spend til the cows come home, it will fail. The right to home ownership on reserves will solve a myriad problems. Folks on 1st Nations remain dependant on the Chief's and band council's for housing that is owned collectively. this has FAILED. Collectivism does NOT work. Allow the same kind of home ownership all Canadians are entitled too, title and the right to sell or inherit.


B in Ottawa
said

Most people commenting on this story this morning are absolutely right. It is time for Aboriginals to see the light and enter the 21st century with the rest of us. The Indian Act needs to be thrown out. Get rid of the reserve system. Aboriginals want good education, good jobs and a stable income. None of those things are possible with the current reserve system which is keeping Aboriginals stuck in neutral. They are being told they are second class citizens by an act of their own government and it is wrong. Doing away with the reserve system will do wonders for Aboriginal people. The band leaders have demonstrated time and time again that they are corrupt and couldn't run a lemonade stand, much less an entire community. Let's stop giving them millions to spend on themselves and start helping Aboriginals fully integrate into Canadian society just as we help new immigrants. It's about time.


Dave in F'ton
said

I'm an abuser? I work hard and I pay my taxes like any other Canadian, and a very good portion of these people take my tax dollars and contribute nothing with it. Who's getting abused here? I want a solution. Something between weening them off the government's teet and flat out cutting them off. Tradition is the worst reason to keep doing something stupid. Yes, we signed a treaty 249 years ago. We've also had 249 years of progress. If they knew then what we know now, I think a lot of parameters in that treaty would be revised.


Rusty Shackelford
said

I'm all for native self governance and all but if federal funds are going to these places there should be much higher financial accountability on behalf of the native tribes. Imagine if the 90 million that went to Attawapiskat was actualy spent properly? They could have built a high rise apartment building for that much and it would have housed the entire tribe! Also, all these posts where the readers are calling others racist based upon what they are saying is a crock of s**t. All that stems to is the fact that people are too afraid to speak up about these issues frankly. Nothing will ever get done if people can't get the "we need to help these poor poor people / we took their land so we need to make sure we do everything for them" mentality out of the way. How about we start treating natives like people and start expecting them to use FEDERAL funding with the same accountability that other canadians have. Let them have their tax exemptions and all those things they fought for over the years but send accountants and business managers out to these tribes so that the chiefs & councils have to spend the money effectively and show them how they can begin to get the tribes to work together to foster industries.



Anne
said

Proud. Intelligent. Hardworking.? The rest of us are insensitive? I saw film of houses last night, hookups in the housing for plumbing yet we get the sob story about pails for waste. It doesn't take a whole lot of know how to learn the basics on hooking up a toilet and a sink. There is absolutely NO excuse for that kind of nonsense being thrown in our faces. Those Chiefs get millions and they can't hook up a few hundred toilets? Give me a break, and stop this 'poor native' nonsense. They choose to accept liv ing by the lowest common denominator.


Will
said

Chiefs "on their own money". Since the money actually came from the taxpayers, it is Canadian's money.


Seeking Wolf
said

Utter nonsense! I reject the stance of these chief's who claim to represent me. They do NOT speak for me or anyone but themselves. The only way ahead is to take responsibility for ourselves, the days fo the reservation system must be brought to a close and all Canadians of all ethnicities (I HATE the word "race") must take on equal responsibilities and obligations. There can be no separation within society if we are to succeed as a nation (That is ONE NATION! The term "first nations" was coined by a University of Toronto political studies professor in the early 1980s- a white professor! If you really wanted to be accurate, we Aboriginals are the 6th or 7th "nation".) I left the res in 1940 to join the army and never went back. What my family has, we earned and was never given nor taken. My children and grandchildren are proud to be hard working contributors to Canadian society rather than a drain on it, unlike what these chief would have us be. I say, enough! Close down the reservation system once and for all, make the bands (AND the chiefs!) accountable, disband INAC; and bring this sorry chapter in our collective history to an end for ALL CANADIANS. THERE IS ONLY ONE CANADA AND ONE LAW; FOR ALL CANADIANS.


Rich
said

For over 100 years the Canadian government has poured money into First Nations Reservation in hopes that the money would be used to assist these people with integration into mainstream society. The problem is that the money was handed over with no real plan or accountability on either side. The First Nations did not appreciate the money and opportunity it afforded them because the money was “free”. Thus most of the money was squandered and many First Nations people fell further behind mainstream society and became a lost people with no direction and many became victims of drugs, achohol and poverty. More money is not the answer, most people who earn their way excell while most people who do not are doomed to fail.
There are many examples of similar situations around the world where people are given something for nothing and thus the return on the money is nothing. All you have to do is look how the average person under communism fared after communism fell, people who suddenly no longer had the state to look after them found themselves lost without opportunity. A similar fate awaits many of the entitlement generation when their gravy train dries up. The bottom line is if you give someone something for nothing, that is exactly what you will get in return.



friend
said

Am a none native who grew up 200 meters from a reserve. I can tell you this, the native peoples should not get a dime of tax dollars until they learn to manage it correctly. Funny how all my native friends who now live off the reserve are doing better than those who still live on the reserve. Why is that?


Austin W in Saskatoon
said

I love how as soon anyone mentions that Aboriginals should start trying to conform, pay taxes and stop receiving Governement money that they are labeled as "RACIST" or "intolerant". It's just an opinion and as much as you beleive that Aboriginals were given a raw deal, we beleive it's time for change and eveyone in Canada should be treated as equal. The only citizens that are entitled to any special treatement or Governement money in this country are the sick, the elderly, single moms and orphans.


Joe M
said

Hey Austin, North Bay, Stop living in the past, you were not there 249 years ago, so you do not know what was done, how people lived and certainly you do not know about the enforcement of treaties from those years. There is definitely a lack of documentation to prove otherwise, and what were the conditions (social, economical, political) during those years? The 1st nations of NF and Lab were almost extinguished (only a few of us with the blood left) because of the wars and conditions at that time. My point, that was then, this is now, we neeeeeed to live in today, let’s fix the problems of today’s communities, if they are not sufficient and the land is not livable, then create communities in major centers that have education, healthcare (till Harper rids that), social and economical support systems, and I could go on. What we need is one Canada, one Govt for it's peoples, proud to be Canadian and proud to promote the cultures that live within.


rick
said

What a comment nation to nation give me a break lets stop the extortion and move on as with your own children continueing a process of entitlement for no effort on their part will never fix anything, Get the people into geographic locations where there is work, let them own their own land individually and then we can make some progress anything less just keeps the status quo going. As for Rhaj's comments I've been in those places for the last 40 years, approx 20 different reserves. I think it is you that either hasn't been there or went like the media and just look at the surface of what is happening


Bryce Code, Calgary
said

I think it is time these Native Indians (I refuse to use the self-serving moniker of First Nations) look in the mirror and decide that they need to progress into society rather than remaining on the outside. They have a lot to offer, but seem to be stuck in 17th century thinking. Constantly standing in the way of Canada's economic progress is not productive nor an effective way to achieve this.


Walking Brave Eagle
said

The magnificent splendour of the historic wampum belt is saddened since it must be carried backwards to symbolically symbolize the damage the Canadian government has done. What is needed is First Nation self governance, more reliable transfer payments to all First Nations ppls, and financial transparency by the Canadian Government, which means no Government accountants snooping around in First Nation affairs.


William Big Bull
said

The founding relationship with FN and the Crown is our Treaties, Economic development was not contemplated in the framework. Repeating the same words at big meetings in Ottawa has not changed much, the change has to happen at home. On reserve bureuacracy has prevented progress as the oppressed become the oppressor. Hardwork and belief in ourselves is the solution not waiting around band offices for Chiefs to come home with another empty bag to give to the masses.


Connie
said

Dave's comments are typical words used by abusers who use power to control their victims. Until the definition of abuse is properly applied and addressed towards vulnerable First Nations people, there will be no going forward. It is this same lack of respect that I witnessed in Caledonia that remains a huge barrier in negotiations.


Austin, North Bay
said

In my despair, all I can do is take solace in the fact that a proud, intelligent, hard-working man is pictured at the top of this page, and the ignorant, racist comments are at the bottom.

How would you feel or react if a contract you made with the government 249 years ago still hadn't been honoured? If you were a proud, intelligent, hard-working man, you would fight in multiple wars alongside that same government anyway - to protect this great land we share.


Roj Blake
said

How bloody insensitive can you folks get? We are an invading force of the first kind. There is a fundamental philosophical divide between our nations, that being that the First Nations has one and Ottawa does not. "Our money" indeed. I know that most of you are good folks and would help a starving person on your porch. Why don't you go there and see for yourself, talk to people before you start slamming doors because the TV tells you to?


Joe M
said

Another meet and dash by Harper to avoid any of the significant back-lash that will come out of these fake meetings. Photo Opt, that's it. Why do we as Canadians encourage the continued repression on the Indian people. Are we not one country, one rule of law for all, no second class citizenship? For people that have not lived 200-300 years ago and do not understand the mind-set of peoples of those years, why do they continue to get money that is squandered at the expense of their communities. Billions of dollars have been spent and the only thing the communities have to show is torn-down homes and squalor conditions. Stop the flow of money to the rich chiefs and their friends, create communities in parts of the country that can provide a proper education, water, sewer systems and healthcare. I don't see too many 1st Nations doctors/lawyers/engineers/Politian’s going back to the ReZ. . . How do we stop it from happening, funnel the money from casinos on reserves to their people in the north, hold the cheifs accountable and put them in jail, seriously $1million for a salary. . . . Yes, i'm aborigional, but not proud of it. . . . . i'm not a second class Canadian, i'm CANADIAN.


paul eh
said

Isn't it time to put all our 19th century wrongs behind us and move on? But there again, who would pay for all the "First" Nations Chiefs and their leagues of Government paid lawyers .


Marc
said

"And these chiefs are still willing, to on their own money, come out here and sit down and still try to be nation to nation, that's pretty remarkable." NDPIt's OUR money.


Dave in F'ton
said

End the era of entitlement with these 'First' nations and get them paying taxes and contributing like anyone else. Yes, we took your land. Boo hoo. Should have put up a better fight back then. Nobody's taking that guilt trip. Where does it end? Imagine if nations conquered and wiped out by the Romans or the Spanish demanded their land back! What if the dinosaurs returned, would you give up your land to them? Sorry folks, that's just history for you.


Ottawa Jack
said

If the 'peth forward'does not include Native accountability for federal taxpayer funding. then the First Nations will not gain any credibility. Let's all hope that this is just not another money-grab with threats of Native unrest.


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