Two tentative treaties trickle into view just in time for the holidays
        
      Vaughn Palmer 
      Vancouver Sun 


Wednesday, December 06, 2006
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=2002e959-51e4-4a03-9910-599984b443dc


VICTORIA - The federal and provincial governments are planning to initial two 
treaties with B.C. first nations before the holidays.

First up is a tentative deal with the Tsawwassen First Nation, then a similar 
agreement with the Maa-nulth First Nations on Vancouver Island.

The B.C. Liberal government has approved both proposed deals. Federal approval 
is imminent, clearing the way for public ceremonies within 10 days or so.

The timing is welcome, given the recent lament by the federal and provincial 
auditors-general about lack of progress in the B.C. treaty process.

The Tsawwassen and Maa-nulth agreements, along with one initialled earlier with 
the Lheidli T'enneh band in Prince George, constitute the first tentative 
treaties under the 13-year-old process.

The largest of the two pending deals is with the Maa-nulth First Nations, an 
alliance of half a dozen bands, based on the west coast of Vancouver Island. 
Together they represent about 2,000 people.

The Tsawwassen First Nation has an estimated 350 members, living on and off the 
reserve adjacent to Delta municipality.

While each deal is tailored to local concerns and aspirations, they are 
intended by governments to be roughly comparable when costed on a per capita 
basis.

The agreement with the Lheidli T'enneh, a band of about 320 people, has been 
valued at $73 million in land, resources, cash and shared revenues.

On that basis -- $230,000 per capita or thereabouts -- these next two 
agreements will probably amount to more than $500 million.

Though the Maa-nulth agreement involves more people and a larger territory, the 
Tsawwassen deal will likely generate more controversy because of the proximity 
to the main population centre of the Lower Mainland.

The terms have circulated informally since my colleague, Miro Cernetig, first 
reported them in The Vancouver Sun over the summer.

One likely sticking point involves the fishery.

The Tsawwassen band sought and obtained a share of the annual commercial salmon 
catch, much to the chagrin of critics of so-called "race-based fisheries," some 
of them federal Conservatives.

"Harvest allocations" is the preferred term among federal officials, confident 
that the deal will pass muster with the Harper government and a majority of 
members of the national Parliament.

Another debating point involves agricultural land. Several hundred hectares 
will be removed from the provincial agricultural reserve and transferred to the 
Tsawwassen band for development purposes.

The Lheidli T'enneh treaty also provides for the removal and transfer of about 
650 hectares from the agricultural reserve.

But the Tsawwassen shift will be more controversial, given the perennial debate 
over the fate of farmland on the Lower Mainland.

The Liberals considered referring the matter to the agricultural land 
commission. But they concluded that it was unfair to expect the commission to 
settle an issue -- native land claims -- that falls completely outside its 
mandate.

Instead, the fate of treaty settlement agricultural lands will be decided by 
the legislature, as part of the treaty ratification process.

Not always the preferred forum for debate for the Liberals, witness their 
decision to truncate the fall session of the legislature. But the right place 
to debate the broad issues involved in settling native treaties.

The Liberals are anxious about Tsawwassen, more than the other two treaties.

Delta Mayor Lois Jackson is already on record as saying "if they [the natives] 
want this land, they should farm it, just like everyone else." Some local 
farmers are trying to tie up the land in a court case, saying it was 
expropriated from them and they want to buy it back.

The government will defend the selection, saying it was the only available land 
within what the band regards as its traditional territory.

The transfer, and subsequent development (probably in conjunction with the 
adjacent Roberts Bank superport) should provide a measure of economic 
self-sufficiency for the Tsawwassen First Nation.

Those being the battle lines, the New Democratic Party faces a tough call on 
whether to support the deal, land transfer and all. Agricultural land is to the 
NDP, what fish are to the Conservatives, as one prominent New Democrat observed 
recently.

Wisely, NDP leader Carole James says she wants to study the treaties before 
announcing whether her party is prepared to support the terms.

She and her colleagues have some time to make up their minds.

The initialling ceremonies would clear the way for ratification votes in the 
new year. The process provides for the natives to vote first, then the 
provincial legislature, then the federal Parliament.

On that basis, the house won't take up any of these treaties until spring at 
the earliest.

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