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A Critical Balance

A Critical Balance. From Treaty Rights and Cumulative Effects to the Protection and Enhancement of Culture Site-C Panel Session . Report of the Treaty Commissioners.

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A Critical Balance

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  1. A Critical Balance From Treaty Rights and Cumulative Effects to the Protection and Enhancement of Culture Site-C Panel Session

  2. Report of the Treaty Commissioners • “…we had to solemnly assure them that only such laws as to hunting and fishing as were in the interest of the Indians and were found necessary in order to protect the fish and fur-bearing animals would be made, and that they would be as free to hunt and fish after the treaty as they would be is they never entered into it.”

  3. Excerpts From 2011 Interview with Betty Willson Born March 2nd 1928 on the Finlay River Mother is buried on the East bank of the Finlay across from Russell Creek

  4. Traditional Knowledge Transfer My Grandma taught my mom to cook fish with wild onions and pigweed I get to teach my son how to throw contaminated fish Back

  5. Report of the Treaty Commissioners • “We assured them that the treaty would not lead to any forced interference with their mode of life…”

  6. Fisheries Impacted by the Williston Reservoir Finley River Wicked River Parsnip River Nabesche River Peace River Clearwater Creek Crooked River Carbon Creek Nation River Manson River Omineca River Osilinka River Mesilinka River Ingenika River Ospika River Davis River Chowika Creek

  7. Other affected Rivers and Lakes • Pine River • Murray River • Wolverine River • Sukunka • Wapiti • Moberly Lake

  8. Is this “No Forced Interference”?

  9. Present Day Oil and Gas Well Sites in Treaty-8 Territory • Over 16,267 oil and gas wells • Over 8,517 Petroleum and NG Facilities • Over 100,000 Km’s of Pipelines • This does not take into account reasonably foreseeable future developments!

  10. How can we Trust the Honor of the Crown "If a caribou needs to be sacrificed for the sake of energy independence, I say, 'Mr. Caribou, maybe you need to take one for the team.' "— Sarah Palin, speaking to the annual meeting of the Safari Club International in Reno, Nev., Jan. 29, 2011.

  11. 2004 SFN/WMFN Petroleum Contaminates StudyProject Conclusions • 7 sumps and 13 flare pits are open and exposed to wildlife. • 75% (12 out of 16) sites tested were contaminated. • Animals such as moose, deer, elk and bear ingest chemicals out of sumps and flare pits. • There is a risk to wildlife of exposure from contamination due to oil & gas activities. • Even sites that are not “contaminated” still pose a potential risk to wildlife through long term ingestion of low level compounds such as salts, metals and hydrocarbons.

  12. If you extrapolate our study, then 75% of these Lease Site’s are Contaminated above and beyond Provincial and Federal levels

  13. Nonsensical Protection Contaminated Water for Moose Clean Water for Industry

  14. Taken fromCTV’s Documentary on First Story, “Black Blood”: Summer Habitat of the SARA Listed Pee-Jay Caribou Herd

  15. Our Elders recall a “sea of caribou” (distribution) and there were so many “like bugs on the land” (population)

  16. Source of food, clothing, art, tools, medicine, knowledge transfer Secondary Impacts: higher dependence on other species Loss of Use

  17. Sustainable Mining?(Practice: mining in critical habitat of endangered herd of caribou)

  18. Comments on application by First Coal Corporation for exploration activities on the range of the Burnt/Pine caribou population.Dr. Dale Seip, Wildlife Ecologist, Northern Interior Forest Region, Prince GeorgeSeptember 25, 2008 • Conclusion: • This proposal will directly destroy core winter range of a Threatened caribou herd. It is also possible that it will displace caribou from a significantly larger area of core habitat. If mining expands to additional areas of the Goodrich property in the future, a very large proportion of the Burnt/Pine caribou winter range will be impacted. It is questionable if the proposed mitigation measures will do much to reduce those impacts. The proposed destruction of core caribou habitat will compromise the recovery of caribou in the area.

  19. “The Treaty Promises No Forced Interference” • How much are the Nations expected to give up? • According to the Global Forest Watch and The David Suzuki Foundation’s Natural Capital Study 2/3 of our immediate area has been taken up!

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