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Volume 10 . Issue 6 July 2014 15,000 WASABI PLANTED Sustainability at T’Sou’ke
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Page 1: July 2014

Volume 10 . Issue 6July 2014

15,000 WASABI P

LANTED

Sustainabilit

y at T’Sou’ke

Page 2: July 2014

urbansystems.ca

aa aa aa

www.coastsalishdevcorp.com

Coast Salish Development Corporation is developing Stz’uminus land

Oyster Bay Development a master-planned community - a place to live work and play

Holland Creeka new residential development

RCR Miningdeveloping a mine through a win-win partnership

BAYYSTERDEVELOPMENT

Page 3: July 2014

WELCOME

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 1

Salish Sea PublishingEditorial Inquiries:Cara McKenna, [email protected](250) 753-0190

Advertising inquires:[email protected](250) 510-9853

Publisher:Naut’sa mawt Tribal CouncilGary Reith, Chief Administrative Officer(604) 943-67121-888-382-7711

The Salish Sea Sentinel is published month-ly, eleven times a year, by the Naut’sa mawt Tribal Council. NmTC was incorporated as a non-profit society in 1983 and is governed by a board of directors from each of our eleven member First Nations.

Our nations are located around the Salish Sea. There are about 6,500 people who hold mem-bership in our nations.

The word Naut’sa mawt means working together as one. The NmTC mission is to support and strengthen the capabilities of our Coast Salish member communities by developing skilled leadership, strong governance, resiliency and self-sufficiency.

NmTC is charged with providing advisory services in five delivery areas:• Economic Development• Financial Management• Community Planning• Technical Services and• Governance Cover photo:T’Sou-ke First Nation Chief Gordon Planes holds a wasabi plant. See the story on pages 8-9.

www.salishseasentinel.ca

RECEPTIONISTS TEAM-BUILD

CONTACTS AT NmTC NATIONS1. HALALT (250) 246-4736 [email protected] www.halalt.org2. HOMALCO (250) 923-4979 [email protected]. KLAHOOSE Qathen Xwegus Management Corp (250) 935-6536 www.klahoose.com4. MALAHAT (250) 743-3231 [email protected] www.malahatnation.com5. SLIAMMON (604) 483-9646 [email protected] www.sliammonfirstnation.com www.sliammontreaty.com6. SNAW-NAW-AS (Nanoose) (250) 390-3661 [email protected] [email protected] www.nanoose.org7. SNUNEYMUXW (Nanaimo) (250) 740-2300 [email protected] www.snuneymuxw.ca8. STZ’UMINUS (Chemainus) (250) 245-7155 [email protected] www.stzuminus.com9. TSAWWASSEN (604) 948-5219 [email protected] www.tsawwassenfirstnation.com10. TSLEIL-WAUTUTH (Burrard) (604) 929-3454 [email protected] www.twnation.com11. T’SOU-KE (Sooke) (250) 642-3957 [email protected] www.tsoukenation.com

The first person you meet in an office is often a receptionist. These multi-skilled people from our communities keep offices running smoothly while answering telephones, taking messages and doing general troubleshooting. They honed their skills in a team-building workshop in Parksville recently. Pictured, from left, are: Desiree Harris of Snuneymuxw, Carol Harry of Malahat and Andrea Morris of Stz’uminus. The highly successful Naut’sa mawt Tribal Council seminar was co-facilitated by executive assistant Caitlin Parker and governance advisor Valerie Cross-Blackett.

Page 4: July 2014

NEWS

2 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

Sliammon First Nation member Takaiya Blaney, 12, spoke and sang to hundreds at an anti-pipeline rally in downtown Vancouver on June 17, hours after the Enbridge Northern Gateway project received conditional approval from the federal government.

Blaney told the crowd that things are going to intensify, while Grand Chief Stewart Phillip announced: “It’s official. The war is on.”

Meanwhile, the Tsleil-Waututh Nation is continuing its legal challenge against the Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline and tanker project.

National Energy Board hearings into the plan to triple the amount of bitumen shipped through Burrard Inlet are expected to start in August.

SLIAMMON CELEBRATES END OF 20-YEAR TREATY PROCESS

THE WAR IS ON

Sliammon First Nation’s treaty received Royal Assent in Canada’s Senate on June 19. That was the final step in a two-decade long process for the

Tla’amin Treaty. Now the nation is working toward a treaty ‘effective date,’ scheduled for April 2016.

In the above photo, Chief Clint Williams,

left, is pictured with Minister Bernard Val-court and B.C.’s Chief Treaty Commissioner Sophie Pierre when the treaty was introduced to Parliament in April.

(Photo: Duncan McCue/CBC News)

Page 5: July 2014

NEWS

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 3

Winner of international choir competition will receive totem and a visit from artist Craig Galligos

SLIAMMON CARVER TO JOURNEY WITH TOTEM

Sliammon carver Craig Galligos spent nearly a year crafting a special totem pole that will be awarded at an international choir competition in Powell River this month.

The winning country will not only receive the red cedar totem, but Galligos will go along with it to present and put up the carving.

The five-day International Choral Kathaumixw festival started July 1.

Galligos, who also works in the forestry industry, joked that he wished he was a judge so he could help pick where he and the totem would end up — which could be anywhere from Kenya to Russia to the USA.

“Really, it’s just neat to get the opportunity to do something like this,” he said.

Galligos said the event’s organizers and the City of Powell River “are trying to incorporate Sliammon more into Kathaumixw again. This is part of that.”

A Sliammon girl, 12-year-old Cheyenne Dominic, was also picked to sing in the open ceremonies.

Kathaumixw itself is a Tla’amin word, meaning “many nations coming together.”

Galligos explained that his design for the six-and-one-half-foot pole was meant to represent both First Nations and Canadian imagery.

A bronze-eyed beaver gnawing on a piece of wood is carved into the bottom of the pole, while the top is an eagle. The totem has bronze, red, yellow, blue and black accents.

This is not Galligos’s first time carving for the City of Powell River. Another of his totems sits near the BC Ferries terminal on the city’s waterfront.

Craig Galligos with his totem pole at his home in the Sliammon First Nation.

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NEWS

4 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

The First Nation’s long-awaited new health building has created a hub for community wellness, but Chief David Bob says there’s still a long way to go

SNAW-NAW-AS HEALTH CENTREBRINGS COMMUNITY TOGETHER

Page 7: July 2014

NEWS

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 5

By Cara McKenna

The Snaw-naw-as First Nation held an official grand opening for its $2 million health centre in mid-June.

The federally funded, 4,000-square-foot centre has been offering services to the community for about a year, but Chief David Bob says this is only the beginning.

Chief Bob — who has been advocating for community healthcare for over a decade — said he hopes to eventually see a doctor, dentist and nurse practitioner working out of the building to support low-income members who can’t afford to pay the difference in their health in-surance for things like dental work and glasses.

“With this new building, we have more people responding to the centre, more people utilizing our staff,” he said. “But we’re still far from a perfect setting and that’s what we’re working on.”

Services currently offered include community health nurses, drug and

alcohol abuse programs, part-time mental health services and occupational therapy.

Snaw-naw-as also recently broke ground for a traditional healing garden beside the new health centre. It will contain medicinal plants for use by the community.

During its opening in June, the Snaw-naw-as Health Centre was blessed and new

additions were revealed including several Coast Salish paintings by community members and a large eagle carving done by Brian Bob.

Community health worker Donna Edwards told a crowd of dozens that she is grateful because, before the centre was opened, the nation’s health services were scattered all around the reserve.

“All the staff was separated. I was sharing an office with a fisheries officer and our community health nurse was in the daycare centre,” she said. “Now, it’s easier and we’re able to provide more support for one another. At first it seemed almost surreal to have my own office.”

Yousuf Ali, who worked with Health Canada while Chief Bob was negotiating for the health building, added that the nation has reason to celebrate.

“These things don’t just come about just because a chief or community comes to Health Canada,” he said. “There’s a lot of work involved.” Ali said the government has put about 150 health buildings in aboriginal communities in the last decade.

The Snaw-naw-as First Nation received a $4,950 grant recently to increase indigenous food knowledge, access and security. The Healthy Communities Capacity Building Grant, awarded by the province, is meant to promote traditional foods in the community and encourage healthy eating.Traditional foods for the First Nation include salmon, shellfish, berries, medicinal teas and more.

Food security funds

Page 8: July 2014

NEWS

6 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

The Snuneymuxw First Nation had a ground-breaking ceremony for its long-awaited community building — which will include a gymnasium, general store and kitchen — before its Aboriginal Day cel-ebration June 20. The community has been in need of such a space on its small main reserve for many years, as the on-reserve Qwam Qwum Stuwixwulh School doesn’t have a gymnasium.

SNUNEYMUXW CELEBRATES NEW GYM ON ABORIGINAL DAY

Clockwise from top left:

• Snuneymuxw Chief John Wesley, right, and Councillor William Yoachim prepare to break ground for the community’s gymnasium. The building could be completed as soon as next year.

• Niki Wedholm, who teaches Grade 4 and 5 at Qwam Qwum Stuwixwulh School, stands on the groundbreaking site with her students, the soon-to-be beneficiaries of the new building.

• ElderGaryManson,whoblessedtheground prior to the dig, dons a hard hat at the gymnasium site.

• TrudyJohnnybroughthertinynewpuppy, Prince, out for the first time for Aboriginal Day.

• Denise White cooks bannock by donation for the Aboriginal Day crowd.

• “JewelryByMissy”

• Bev Robinson takes down a pair of earrings from her display for a customer.

• Snuneymuxw Councillor EmmyManson shows off a building plan.

Page 9: July 2014

NEWS

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 7

Page 10: July 2014

NEWS

8 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

By Cara McKenna

T’Sou-ke Chief Gordon Planes steps into one of three large on-reserve greenhouses, carpeted with about 5,000 bright green wasabi plants.

The plants are being sprayed with a thick fog of cool, nutrient- infused mist, meant to simulate the climate of Japanese mountains.

“Pretty nice, isn’t it?” he asks affably. “It’s atmospheric.”

WASABI

T’Sou-ke First Nation Special Projects Manager Andrew Moore, left, and Chief Gordon Planes visit one of the community’s wasabi greenhouses as the plants are misted with nutrients.

MAKES T’SOU-KE EVEN GREENER

Page 11: July 2014

NEWS

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 9

Moore shows off one of the soon-to-be finished greenhouses. Inset: Community members put the final wasabi plants in the ground on June 17.

The wasabi, or Japanese horseradish, plants are only about ankle-high but will grow to about three feet.

The three greenhouses represent a $300,000 investment for the T’Sou-ke First Nation. They are expected to bring in significant profit and have already created about 20 jobs for community members. The last of 15,000 plants were put in this month, and in about a year the wasabi will be ready for distribution.

Wasabi is best known as the bright green condiment that comes alongside sushi, although the version commonly served in local restaurants is often imitation due to a wasabi shortage in Japan. T’Sou-ke special projects manager Andrew Moore said the primary profit is expected to come from the health industry.

“The main market is in its medicinal qualities,” he said. “In a sense its sort

of really consistent with First Nations healing plants and it’s really unique in B.C. It fits in very well with the whole concept of having plants to heal.”

Current research shows wasabi plants have anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial, anti-platelet and anti-cancer effects, but the scarcity of the plant means its not used commonly, which is why T’Sou-ke predicts high demand.

Chief Planes added that there is demand for wasabi as food, as well.

“It’s really strong, stronger than the stuff you’d get in your local restaurants, and the quality is really good,” he said. “I think that’s why this product is more made for the high-end restaurants.”

He said Vancouver Island is the perfect place to grow the spicy plant because of its temperate climate. There are other wasabi growers in B.C., but T’Sou-ke is the first First

Nation to grow it in Canada as far as he knows.

“It’s low maintenance,” he added. “It grows in gravel so it just sits.”

As wasabi plants grow, they are kept temperate with shaded canopies and insulated greenhouse walls. There are also heaters for when it gets cold.

Moore said that the wasabi green-houses fit into a bigger food security and sustainability plan. “Maybe some of the profit we make from the wasabi will go into building another green-house or two for community gardens,” he said.

“It’s all about sustainability, and coming from a direction that the only people who have ever lived sustainably in North America are the First Nations. And probably still are. If we could just bring back some of those traditions and values, then we’d be alright.”

Page 12: July 2014

NEWS

10 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

Six First Nations hope to expand clean energy development oppor-tunities in aboriginal communities through a new agreement.

The Sliammon, Klahoose, Sechelt, Lil’Wat, Sts’ailes and Squamish First Nations signed a memorandum of understanding on June 11 to support green energy proj-ects that enable natural resource protection.

All six have been involved in environmentally-friendly energy projects for the last few years and are now formalizing their working relationship.

Klahoose and Sliammon, along with Homalco (all three are Naut’sa mawt Tribal Council nations), signed

long-term agreements several years ago with run-of-river power projects in Bute and Toba Inlets and for power line transmission corridors.

Klahoose Chief James Delorme said the agreement is an exciting

first step for First Nations around the province.

“First Nations having a greater role in the process of approval of green energy projects has been the mandate of the working group,”

he said. “Now we will have better representation and a clearer role for nations interested in independent power projects.”

The MOU was re-signed with Clean Energy B.C. on June 24th. 

NEW GREEN AGREEMENT PROMOTES CLEAN ENERGY

APPEAL FOR SOIL DUMPSITE

EXTENDED

Work on a run-of-river project in the Toba Valley. Inset: Chief James Delorme.

The environ-mental appeal process around a contaminated soil dumpsite in Shawnigan Lake – which has been widely opposed but supported by Malahat First Nation leadership – has been extended until the end of July.

The evidentiary part of the legal proceedings before the BC Environmental Appeal Board wrapped up on June 6, but because of extra witness testimony and evidence is now expected to fully conclude on July 25. Hearings were initially expected to finish in April.

Malahat Chief Michael Harry has publicly supported the idea, and wrote a letter to the appeal board last year urging them to expedite the appeal process because he is comfortable with the amount of consultation and scientific assessment that has taken place.

But Shawnigan Residents Association president Calvin Cook said many residents are still concerned that there are risks that haven’t been accounted for given that the site is in the headwaters of the Shawnigan Lake watershed.

“We’re finding all these shortcomings and yet the permit was still approved,” he said. “I live here, I swim in the lake, I drink the water out of the lake.”

South Island Aggregates Ltd. was granted a permit by the Ministry of Environment to go forward with the project – which would allow the company to truck in 100,000 tons of contaminated soil per year for 50 years – in 2013.

Chief Michael Harry

First Nations having a greater role in the process of approval of green energy projects has been the mandate of the working group.

First Nations interested in independent power projects now have a clearer role

Page 13: July 2014

NEWS

SALISH SEA SENTINEL • 11

In the same week that Halalt First Nation opened its $2.7 million water works system, its neighbour the Dis-trict of North Cowichan announced that it wanted year-around pumping from the Chemainus River aquifer.

The new water treatment facility, reservoir and other infrastructure will supply water to 41 homes in the Halalt community as well as 21 homes on the nearby Penelakut First Nation’s Tsussie reserve. The water will come from the same aquifer that North Cowichan supplies residents of the town of Chemainus with water.

Preliminary talks between Halalt and the municipality have already begun about the plan to pump water throughout the year. Pumping is currently allowed only during win-ter months. That pumping started after a ten-year battle that went all

the way to the BC Court of Appeals. Halalt objected to the plan over fears of lowering river levels and impacts on habitat.

New facility will supply water to homes in boththe Halalt and Penelakut communities

WELLS IN THE NEWS AGAIN AT HALALT

Water technician David Norris gave a tour to daycare children when Halalt First Nation unveiled its new water pumping station and resoirver on June 18.

Contractors, AANDC officials and Halalt workers at the 500,000 litre reservoir.

SNUNEYMUXWMAKES SPECIALTOURIST SPOTThe Snuneymuxw First Nation is working

to make a small island off the shores of Nanaimo a world class tourism destination.

Newcastle Island, traditionally known as Saysutshun, is a significant area in the Snuneymuxw’s traditional territory and has a rich aboriginal history over thousands of years, including being used as a spiritual training place for runners, canoeists and warriors.

Snuneymuxw Chief John Wesley said leadership hopes to make Newcastle attractive to locals as well as people from around the world.

“Snuneymuxw is very grateful for the opportunity to make Newcastle Island a world class destination for tourism,” he said.

Nanaimo Mayor John Ruttan said that funding from a new two per cent hotel room tax in the city will support a planned cultural centre on the island, which is cur-rently mostly undeveloped.

“The revenue collected…will include the creation of several new multi-day festivals while also supporting the Snuneymuxw First Nation with their plans to enhance the cultural and educational experience of Newcastle Island,” he said in a media release.

Nanaimo’s hotel room tax is expected to bring in up to $400,000 per year and approximately 45 per cent will go to implementing Snuneymuxw’s plan.

The Nanaimo Hospitality Association and Tourism Nanaimo are also involved in the tourism enhancement project.

Newcastle Island is just a short ferry ride away from downtown Nanaimo.

Page 14: July 2014

NEWS

12 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

A girls’ crew from Stz’uminus practiced their strokes before the Buckskin race at Cowichan Bay in mid-June.

July 5-6Tsleil-Waututh water festival canoe races, Whey-a-Wichen/Cates Park, North Vancouver.

July 11-13Canoe races at Tsawout First Nation, near Sidney.

July 13-19Qatuwas (People gathering together) Festival at Heiltsuk First Nation in Bella Bella. Over 100 canoes and 1,000 pullers as well as 5,000 visitors expected. www.tribaljourneys.ca

July 17The Industry Council for Aboriginal Business (ICAB) holds its Aboriginal Business Recognition Awards event at the Roundhouse Community Centre in Yaletown, Vancouver. More information at www.icab.ca.

July 17The first job fair, hosted by the North Vancouver Island Aboriginal Training Society, will be held at Strathcona Gardens, 225 South Dogwood Street in Campbell River from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Open to jobseekers and industries. Job-seekers should arrive with resumes, ready to work. More information at www.nviats.com

July 19-20Canoe races at Kulleet Bay, Stz’uminus First Nation near Ladysmith.

July 26-27Canoe races at Tsartlip First Nation, Brentwood Bay.

September 22-25Collaboration: Realizing Opportunities is the theme of the 21st annual national conference of CANDO, the organization dedicated to Aboriginal economic devel-opment. It will be held at the Vancouver Island Conference Centre in Nanaimo and is co-hosted by Snuneymuxw First Nation and Naut’sa mawt Tribal Council. www.edo.ca/conference/2014

SALISH SEA CALENDAR

Page 15: July 2014
Page 16: July 2014

NEWS

14 • SALISH SEA SENTINEL

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