Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Northern Gateway Pipeline - Ten percent equity for First Nations in Northern Gateway Pipeline Project
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Host of contrasts on the coast
The coast is a host of contrasts and a primary one is cultural. For example, First Nations are people of the Potlatch who express a lot of national heritage in artistic endeavours that are indelibly cultural. The First Nations identify a presence and their communities with iconic art found in dozens of locations up the coast. When you come to see major features in First Nation art you are likely in the midst of a First Nation community.
Tourism travel on the coast leads visitors into adventurous activities like tours of whale and bear-watching that take people to places like Bute Inlet, Toba Inlet, Desolation Sound. And when you go farther north, tours take visitors into the Broughton Archipelago, Knight’s Inlet or Kingcome Inlet, or around the top of Vancouver Island. As a cultural exploration, Vancouver Island is but one of a seemingly countless number of islands, many of which were inhabited, while others were cultivated, and others were used for communal harvest of vegetation or wildlife.
It is surprising how many people lived in places no longer considered for habitation. In some of these places there are communities holding extinction at bay with one or two Band members living in remote locations like Hopetown or Gilford Island. At Kingcome Inlet, very top of the world when you are there, 125 souls keep a solid First Nation footprint on the ground (even though the houses are on stilts).
Victoria is a picturesque city full of art shops and museums often honed in on the First Nation culture of the Pacific Coast, but Victoria is a city. On the opposite side of the prominent Malahat from Victoria and still southerly on Vancouver Island is the city of Duncan, halfway point between Victoria and Nanaimo. Duncan is a great place to see the cultural contrast in full bloom. They call Duncan the City of Totems and there are totem poles set around the city but the main attraction is the Quw'utsun' Cultural and Conference Centre. It’s a re-created Salishan village nestled beside the Cowichan River and a beautiful representation of past and present Cowichan Tribes community.
The north end of Vancouver contains more rugged beauty enhanced by temperate weather, and the rainforest is more readily available to visit. Hiking, touring, fishing, and outdoor life continues on a year-round basis, top to bottom, on both sides of the big island, but when you arrive at the community of Alert Bay on Cormorant Island you could ask about visiting Yukusem where you will learn about the study of Culturally Modified Trees (CMT). This is the study of human beings working to organize around rainforest resources. What David Garrick, anthropologist, uncovered on Hanson Island is the 'transgenerational' management of vegetation by First Nations at the north end of the Inside Passage, and it is amazing.
This careful study of transgenerational management provides evidence that First Nations used forest resources in coastal rainforests in complex arrangements. Special preserves of rainforest under carefully defined jurisdictions were ‘managed’ to create and provide essential resources. Social groups conducted large scale horticulture within particular groves of cedar trees on Yukusem’s 16 square kilometres, doing so on a truly grand scale. Together they made cedar trees do the most incredible things horticultural.
David Garrick uncovered cedar-shaping in CMTs during his long and fruitful tenure of archaeology on-site at Yukusem. This amazing process involves planning that spans centuries. This cultivation was done in a manner that shaped trees and modified them to produce a surplus of bark while maintaining the integrity of a living cedar tree. First Nations maximized cedar bark production by modifying the tree, doing this in a way that left the cedar tree to heal, thrive, and produce more surplus bark. It was a strategy of development that occurred because cedar bark was a staple product in the social and economic development of coastal life. This cultural product was used in an apparently endless array of purposes. The practice to cultivate giant cedars was millennial to make trees produce a surplus cedar bark into a raw material for production of manufactured goods.
Nothing was left to chance or waste. The term old-growth forest was meaningless within a culture that practised continuous and specialized cultivation in the growth of the forests over several centuries. Even a burnt forest was an opportunity to harvest a different list of highly-prized resources. Meanwhile, everything on Yukusem was planned around the need to produce cedar bark for future generations. A prime example of the transgenerational planning policy occurs on a site called Bear Grove on Yukusem. Garrick’s mapping points out the existence of at least 55 shaped cedars per hectare in the Bear Grove sector of the island. This is an intense concentration of evidence indicative of creating surplus bark. It becomes obvious from concentrations of CMTs of this magnitude that an organized effort was made to cultivate and exploit cedar bark in patterns showing sustainable, long-term, transgenerational planning processes.
The people of Yukusem living 1,350 years ago cultivated a specific tree to furnish Namgis carver Beau Dick with raw material for his canoe project in the modern age. Also in this transgenerational context, ancient people provided a modern chain of evidence to Harry Alfred and Don Svanvik, CMT researchers from Alert Bay who are able to exert First Nation jurisdiction over Yukusem cedar groves in the present. The vital (and heretofore missing) evidence was produced from messages in trees hundreds of years old. The fingerprints of this interaction with forests have been uncovered in many of the forests of B.C., even so, it was a long and arduous 20th century for the folks around Yukusem. Only in 2004 did the First Nations recover jurisdiction over Yukusem.
CMTs studied in this way by Garrick provided scientific resources and evidence to give First Nations proof of former jurisdiction. It is interesting to note, however, there was no apparent conflict in the management of Yukusem resources until about 1930, Garrick explains. His archaeological time-line shows that before the cataclysmic culture shock treatments took form (residential schools, banning of potlatchs, et al), the arrival of industrial foresters was a not-unwelcome event to a degree. The industrial foresters were cooperative by taking only a few trees from Yukusem’s treasured groves, and Garrick reports they apparently left cedar trees untouched, cedar was for the cedar shapers those who used it as a specially-managed and treasured resource. Thus Garrick has proven how two management paradigms co-existed!
It required an exercise of federal government policy to alienate First Nations from their management and jurisdiction over cedar shaping activities. From the time such government policies were introduced until Yukusem Heritage Society was formed in 2004 the cedar groves on Hanson Island faced dire circumstances. Garrick’s archaeological study was the one thing standing in their way, and in a pleasant turn since his study began a series of scientific facts have freed people to exert their sovereignty.
“I am the land and resource officer of the Namgis First Nation,” said Harry Alfred, one afternoon in a communal garden on Yukusem. Alfred described how people have rebounded because of Garrick’s work in these groves. Cultural energy burst from the CMT research and in a way people have regained a sense of cultural balance. New community energy has been born from the old secrets. Alfred and Don Svanvik sit on the Yukusem board of directors on behalf of the Namgis First Nation. Two other Bands share jurisdiction over Hanson Island (Tlowitsis and Muntagila). Alfred and Svanvik have become CMT experts within their communities. “The Namgis Nation,” said Alfred, “comprised about 4,000 km.” With a sweep of his arm he described a rectangular shaped territory with Yukusem sitting almost at the centre.
Furthermore, under the guidance of Namgis artist and lay-historian Beau Dick a group of volunteers has built a few community facilities on the south-west quadrant of Yukusem to teach people the meaning of the old ways. Dick described how one social organization took people into the silvan wilderness and constructed dugout canoes. It is known that canoes were constructed in the cultivated cedar groves in areas adjoining other food or health or community-based cultivated resources. The canoes were dugouts, designed in a technically superior manner to take people back and forth between communities and fishing grounds or ther harvest areas throughout the Broughton Archipelago.
The communities of old are buried today in the forest floor in the surroundings of etchings of harvest found in ancient cedar trees. A volunteer canoe project amounts to a defacto form of reclamation of Yukusem and was the idea of Dick who grew up in a Big House society that remained standing in the splendour of Kingcome Inlet, representing a miraculous survival where traditionalists dodged bullets (literal and figurative) through many previous decades.
Dick learned to carve from his grandfather and father and obtained teaching about hidden meanings in a unique form of artistic expression. Life goes on, yes, and Beau Dick, despite being a realist, believes he is restoring historical significance to the nation by uncovering the old secrets of cedar forest management. On the southwest quadrant of Yukusem he is staging a come-back by building a cultural camp to teach people the old ways -- sharing a forest in a transgenerational and environmentally sustainable way.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
B.C. Justice system has specialized First Nation advocates
![]() |
Patricia Jackson volunteers as treasurer on the board of directors of the Northern BC Crisis Centre |
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Beau Dick canoe carving project on Yukusem, aka Hanson Island, B.C.
Hawk Hawkins and Beau Dick, circa 2008, Yukusem Culture Bivouac on Hanson Island, B.C.. |
Beau Dick is a machine when it comes to working with wood. He is a Kwakwala carver of renowned ability whose life includes meeting the British Royal Family, and includes possession of the highest ranking bloodline.
Beau Dick was raised in Kingcome Inlet, B.C. (an obscure postal code), and grew up within a Big House society still standing in the splendour of its generations.
Kingcome Inlet represented a miraculous survival where traditionalists had dodged a lot of bullets, both literal and figurative, through many previous decades.
Beau Dick learned to carve from his grandfather and father and the teaching contained the deeper meaning of this unique form of artistic expression. He learned these important lessons at the archetype level, from which level was born a life-force.
With this knowledge and energy Beau Dick has launched himself into the community to show people the deeper meaning of their old ways.
The timing is right for Beau Dick. He found it easier to create a significant cultural revival since the return of Hanson Island to First Nation custody. It is an opportunity to break out of systematic oppression.
Proof of Aboriginal stewardship of this island has been uncovered in rich Hanson Island Old Growth cedar groves, because the Cultural Modified Trees are filled with archaeological evidence of Aboriginal Rights and Title.
Hanson Island has been returned to the custody of the First Nations. CMTs have restored once-hidden knowledge about shore-based societies constructed around rainforest cedar groves.
David Garrick, anthropologist, coined the term “transgenerational” management of forest resources to explain a social arrangement in forests. Rainforests were ‘managed’ under carefully defined jurisdiction.
Social groups practiced grand scale horticulture on stands of cedar on Yukusem’s (Hanson Island) 16 square kilometres. They made cedar trees do the most amazing things. Excess bark was produced for harvest, which might take a couple hundred years to get to.
Harry Alfred (et al) has taken scientific evidence to carve a role in management. He is one of the board of directors of Yukusem Heritage Society, which has custody of most of Hanson Island.
He is also, “land and resource officer of the Namgis First Nation,” he explained, one afternoon in a Garrick-constructed garden in Yukusem heights.
“The Namgis traditional territory,” said Alfred, comprised, “about 4,000 sq km.” Extending an arm to four corners he described a rectangular shaped territory with Yukusem almost centre.
Harry Alfred said the community rebounded due to David Garrick’s work in cedar groves on Yukusem (over 20 years of hands-on research). The First Nations managers have devoted nation-building energy to CMT research.
A hundred people been trained by Garrick and these are people who have regained cultural balance from the experience.
Life goes on, yes, and Beau Dick, a realist, knows this. He is adding something to a historically significant nation using the old secrets of majestic Indian Nation jurisdiction.
On the southwest quadrant of Yukusem he is staging a canoe carving project and building a cultural camp to teach people the old ways about sharing a forest in a transgenerational and environmentally sustainable way.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Monday, May 5, 2008
Friday, May 2, 2008
Feeding the trout in Mission, B.C.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Huge breakthrough coming for Prince George First Nation students
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Fish farms are the economic drivers in Klemtu
Klemtu, B.C., is found on Swindle Island, alongside the north-central Pacific coast of Canada, and this town is residence of a First Nation called the Kitasoo/XaiXais, and they have recently authorized a change of location for two of their fish farm sites situated nearby.
Their partner in fish farming Marine Harvest Canada moved circular net-pens into position at Kid Bay and Sheep Pass farm sites to receive a delivery of a boat-load of Atlantic salmon smolts in late January 2008.
These sites have started to grow groups of fish to be harvested in processing plant facilities of Kitasoo Seafood Ltd., the company belonging to the Kitasoo/XaiXais First Nation.
These locations will be supervised by MHC area manager Terry Smith who has a 20 year history of growing fish including a recent two year stint in Norway.
Terry worked for one of the first industrial-scale net-pen fish farms on the west coast of Canada in the 1980s. Royal Pacific Fish Farms charted new territory in the world of net-pen fish farming by pioneering new economies of scale for growing fish at a profit.
Royal Pacific may have failed on the management side, Terry surmises, but they brought the operational standards up by investing millions in net-pen and float and anchor technology and research.
It was obvious by this time (early 1990s) that aquaculture and fish growing industry had to work within the regulatory environment for marketing food in the modern Canadian and world economy.
The standard for food commodities is regulated by the Codex Alimentarius Commission (http://www.codexalimentarius.net/web/index_en.jsp), which was, "created in 1963 by FAO and WHO to develop food standards, guidelines and related texts such as codes of practice under the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards Programme."
The food standards website continued, "The main purposes of this Programme are protecting health of the consumers and ensuring fair trade practices in the food trade, and promoting coordination of all food standards work undertaken by international governmental and non-governmental organizations."
The Marine Harvest Canada operation comprises about 50 percent of the production of farmed fish on the Pacific coast of Canada (see video 'slide #X). This makes MHC a good company to observe.
In reality Marine Harvest Canada made a number of acquisitions to become this big in Canada, the last one occurring in 2007, when Panfish Canada was sold to Marine Harvest Canada. This means Marine Harvest Canada runs about 40 fish farm sites on Canada’s Pacific coast.
The net-pens for these farm sites are situated on the Inside Passage on the top half of Vancouver Island, by and large; in addition Marine Harvest Canada owns a group of sites operating within the Kitasoo/XaiXais First Nation traditional territory.
Those sites give jobs 350 kilometres north of Port Hardy to Kitasoo/Xaixais members, and crops of fish are processed in a plant owned and operated by the folks in Klemtu, B.C..
Critics of fish farming in Canada come from a variety of sources and state a variety of offenses by the industry and hardly any of the opposition arguments can be proven, nor can the industry state with a lot of authority that the practices of net-pen fish farming are not deleterious to the ecology surrounding the sites.
The Broughton Inlet at the northeast tip of Vancouver Island is a treasure of culture and history, also, a present-day showcase of the Namgis Nation's survival as a people. People in the area have been party to a fight with fish farming since the beginning.
With each industrial advance the Namgis and people like the recently deceased Pat Alfred ramped up their opposition shown to the fish farmers. Today it is the Broughton Inlet where much focus has been placed especially regarding the issue of sea lice. (see video 'slide #X)
While everybody has concerns about the growing conditions for animals that fill the food baskets of the world, those who monitor the growth of salmon in net-pens on the west coast are called fish technicians.
These people receive direct training in the employment on farm sites, some generic and some specific training for the jobs on the sites. The tech-training includes small motor maintenance, farm math, insights into feeding rates, watching for plankton blooms, and monitoring fish health (biopsies).
It is a six-month course which includes CPR, first aid, WHMIS, forklift training, and EMS (internal); and employees are trained for spill response, risk assessment, and operation of marine-vessels like small boats and other watercraft.
Terry Smith, aforementioned area manager for the Klemtu North farm sites, hires people who show the requisite enthusiasm for the work. What is missing on the west coast, according to Terry, is a working post-secondary education research and training facility.
This kind of an investment is made in other countries like Norway that engage in the industrial production of a protein base in seafood. He suggests that the ministry of post-secondary education making an investment in research could discover new directions to take with these agriculture/aquaculture/mariculture developments.
The reality is developments are necessary in that they are constructed to fill a gap in the supply chain of seafood to the food basket (see video 'slide #X, Ian Roberts of MHC explains how aquaculture fits into the food supply).
If things are changing beneath farm sites, it behooves public authorities to seek an understanding of what is happening. Canadian fish farmers cope with harmful plankton (and algae called heterosigma http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterosigma_akashiwo and this way, whereas farm sites in Norway and Chile do not have the same problems with plankton.
The fact remains that fish farms make adaptations to the environment in order to make fish thrive, in other words, the farm sites are 'created' environments. "We are close to creating aquariums in the ocean by using aerated water, moving preferred water by lifting it to displace harmful plankton from the net-pens,” Ian Roberts explained.
Steve Cross of Aquametrix Research (http://www.aquametrix-research.com) is investigating the potential for a 'polyculture' to develop around fish farm sites.
If the sites are changing area ecology perhaps it could be put to commercial use. Cross intends to grow black cod in net-pens and seaweed, scallops, and sea cucumbers near the pens, and monitoring the growth (and biological condition) of prawns.
"We call it integrated multi-tropic aquaculture," and Cross is experimenting with black cod. kelp, scallops, and other species, "It hasn't quite kicked off yet," but he has spent the past year putting it together. Now the net-pens are in place and the fish will be moved within a few weeks.
"We have about one kilometre of kelp laid in this month, and we are moving in half a million scallops (in Feb, 2008). When the fish are moved into the pens we will move sea cucumber into the site under the pens.
“It is a natural habitat for them and they are eaters,” of all the biomass fallout. (Sea cucumber http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_cucumber)
"We are getting set up and licensed," Cross explained, including fitting into base-line environmental regulations and other arrangements. By this summer the site will be thriving with activity, and possibly with polyculture.
"We are a pilot-scale test around the issue of fish farm waste management," Cross, added, and the task is to find out if there are uses for the organic nutrient loads that are obviously generated by fish pens.
Cross agreed the research is lacking at present, "We think this is an important avenue of research," investigating the commercial potential for farm sites to develop polyculture seafood developments. We are designing a balanced system and will report the science," in the usual publications.
"We have a lot of interest in the research," from a cross section of organizations, said Cross, "including the World Wildlife Federation and Greenpeace expressing interest in the outflow of reports. We are seeking a solution to some of the problems perceived to be associated with raising commercial quantities of fish in net-pens. We are trying to address the waste issue," because no one seems to be convinced that closed bags offer alternatives.
If the results prove positive fish farms will suddenly represent a new economic opportunity and research may provide further incentive to develop commercial polyculture sites in the west coast aquaculture/mariculture scheme of things.
"We may find a commercial solution," to mitigate against the purportedly deleterious ecological presence of stand-alone fish farms. Cross promised to get www.firstnationscanada.com onto the polyculture site sometime this coming summer.
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Birch Bark Biting preserved by coincidental names
![]() |
Angelique Merasty Levac |
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Fraser River Salmon Table Society meetings devise long-term strategies for sustainable salmon returns
The Fraser River Salmon Table Society is working toward consensus, said Richard McGuigan, PhD, co-chair of the salmon table (along with Marcel Shepert, Pacific Salmon Treaty) during the meeting in Prince George, BC, Sep 18 07, at the Prince George Native Friendship Centre.
Dr. McGuigan said, “Cooperative Decision Management is the way to achieve consensus,” for the fledgling table society.
By this emerging method interest-based negotiations are conducted through (three) stages and everybody abides by a final consensus. Cooperative Decision Management allows no veto to any party, and is not co-management, which, “has a negative reputation and gives regulators a lot of power,” said co-chair McGuigan.
The salmon table process must respect the ability of First Nations to represent their constituencies, said Doug Kelly, Sto:lo Tribal Council, “especially regarding the inter-tribal treaty process.” The table is open as long as Aboriginal rights and title are respected.
David Moore worked on table planning, “One goal of the salmon table is to create transparency in marketing, ultimately to resolve problems like selling caviar for as low as 11 cents per pound and finding out it fetches $15 a pound in the US food market.”
This transparency is the goal of a Siska First Nation demonstration project, to, “catch, process, and sell their fish harvested from a fish wheel,” with approval of CFIA, BC Food Safety Act, and BC Centre for Disease Control.
Salmon is a commodity from the wild realm, and salmon is still largely misunderstood in terms of behaviour and even physiology
Moore explained, “We have learned colour of the flesh is not determined by how far up the river the fish has gone,” a previous assumption, “rather, maturity is the determinant in quality and colour of the flesh.”
This is interesting because the old view was the farther up the river salmon were caught the less red and more dark the flesh would be (and dark is inedible). Now upstream fishers can join the mainstream market.
“The key is flexibility in marketing,” said Moore to the table society meeting.
He said, “Micro-processing can be done profitably without over-capitalization.” A boondoggle may exist in the changing provincial management of food health via Regional Health Authorities in BC.
The BC government says on the internet, “This structure, introduced in December 2001, modernized a complicated, confusing and expensive health care system by merging the previous 52 health authorities into a streamlined governance and management model.”
Today, said Moore, “these regional health authorities are charged with supplying permits required for the catching processing and selling of fish.”
The commercialization of fresh caught salmon may be advanced through a new process, noted Moore, now including a specific container for storing a fish, a card-board, wax-coat that preserves ice and fish together for the few hours required to get a fish a proper larder.
The problem is, however, a lack of fish to market. Teresa Ryan works in Vancouver as a fish biologist on the Pacific Salmon Commission and a scientist representing coastal First Nations. They were all asking the same question: where have all the fish gone?
A report in the Prince George Free Press said low salmon returns found along the Fraser River this year show nets producing a tenth the expected catch. As a result people are not going fishing.
Obviously this is a major concern in Canada’s North West Pacific where often the First Nations are losing of a way of life. Traditional salmon harvests unite communities but this year nobody goes to the river.
These people are facing a disappearing cultural diet, a staple food for the poor, and a lack of control over problems associated with the loss.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Multi-faceted Aboriginal Justice Plan from the UBCIC
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
CBSA watching cross-border travel by air, automobile, and marine
Faith St. John is communications manager for the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) on the west coast. Faith said training underway imminently for Canadian border guards to be deployed in the fall (with the Beretta Storm 9mm handgun) to fulfill the announcement of the federal government this winter. In Budget 2006, the Government of Canada provided $101 million over two years to begin the process of arming CBSA officers and eliminating work-alone sites.
The CBSA is on track with its plans to begin arming the officers. "We are currently working with the RCMP to develop a comprehensive arming training program tailored to the duties, responsibilities and work environment of CBSA officers." Many policies will have to be developed and revised. The policies currently under discussion include, but are not limited to: the use of force and the use of sidearms; the wearing of protective and defensive equipment; the safe transportation and storage of sidearms and other defensive tools; and the reporting and investigation of use of force incidents.
"Throughout the implementation process, we are consulting with key stakeholders, including union officials," said St. John. The arming of border services officers and the elimination of work-alone sites will provide greater protection to CBSA officers at the border, and to those engaged in specialized enforcement activities within Canada. Security at the border will be increased since CBSA officers will be trained and equipped to intervene and deal with situations where they are not currently in a position to respond.
"The introduction of sidearms will provide an additional tool for officers to protect themselves, their colleagues and the travelling public. The CBSA is committed to ensuring that this initiative is implemented properly, safely, and without undue delay," said Derek Mellon, CBSA media liaison in Ottawa.
Armed officers will be able to respond to a broader range of situations before involving police response The first group of armed officers will be in the field by August 2007. By March 2008, between 250 and 300 officers will be fully trained and carrying arms. "We are currently reviewing and examining opportunities to compress the initial estimated timeframe of the initiative," said Faith.
Nexus is offered at airports where they have US pre-clearance, clearing US customs in Canada before departing to the USA. Nexus has come to be considered the best alternative to passports and everybody is agreed it will work, "It was a joint initiative so of course we consulted closely." For more information on NEXUS, or to become a member, visit www.nexus.gc.ca
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Search 100s of McColl Magazine articles
Readers Favorites
-
Ken Dryden, the legendary Montreal Canadiens goaltender who backstopped the team’s 1970s dynasty to six Stanley Cups, has passed away at the...
-
I asked our friendly neighborhood X Grok: What is CBC Journalist Andrew Coyne's family relationship to Justin Trudeau and Mark Carney ...
-
Kris Eriksen, in Canada @KEriksenV2 says, So, now can we ALL agree that Canadians are in very, very, VERY DEEP trouble? "Hold my beer....
-
Sounds positively giddy you can send 4.84 million barrels of crude oil per day to the United States but take a few bottles of bourbon in re...
-
Wait for the sign: an auspicious portent last year over a planting camp near Burns Lake. 2025, so far, is going well, according to field rep...
-
So I'll be a monkey's uncle. The Liberal Crime Syndicate just robbed Canadian residents of three-quarters of a trillion dollars i...
-
pic.twitter.com/u6ZFHSWMri — Vote Canada (@VoteCanadaCom) June 5, 2025
-
The federal Liberal Party running a lottery on Canadians feels like the new game in town. It's not the usual lottery. The Liberal Lo...