Business Interests: Current & Future Projects
By Rachel MacNeill
Half of Tsawwassen lives in overcrowded homes on the reserve. The rest form a growing waiting
list for homes, many in the meantime living in other parts of the province and in Bellingham,Washington.
"Community members with growing families wanting new housing are increasingly frustrated,"
says Tsawwassen Chief Kim Baird. "It's been many years since the TFN has been able to
pull together a housing project." A lack of infrastructure, high costs and few financial
resources make the community's government unable to improve the quality of existing homes
or provide new ones.
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| PHOTO: TFN |
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"Land use issues are probably the most controversial aspect of the treaty, but our community will benefit from the revenue brought in by industrial development," Chief Kim Baird |
In 1994, the TFN began construction on an 86-unit condominium on the beach called Tsatsu Shores.
But the homes were not for Tsawwassen, with most selling for between $120,000 and $300,000.
The new treaty will bring even more business opportunities, says Chief Kim Baird. The band
is considering three development plans each including a mix of housing for residents and
on the open market, says Baird.
But the real criticisms of these development plans have
concerned industrial expansion. The land's waterfront location makes it prime industrial
real estate, says Baird. "[These projects] are where we will get the revenue we need
to become prosperous."
The Roberts Bank coal port and container terminal will almost certainly be expanded, says
Baird. Tsawwassen's involvement could involve land leasing, port services on adjacent
land and a profit-sharing agreement with the port authority. In addition, band members would
benefit from employment offered by developing and maintaining port services on Tsawwassen
land.
New port storage container facilities, for example, are expected bring in jobs and revenue.
"There's a lot of pressure on us to do port-related development," says Baird. She
has been approached by various port business interests and recently traveled to Dubai, Hong
Kong and Singapore to tour port operations. "We're seeing if it is something that could
be compatible with our community."
But it is the use of prime agricultural land to store shipping containers that angers critics
most. "We are in the process of legislating the end of the Agricultural Land Reserve and
gaining a parking lot of containers," Delta North NDP MLA Guy Gentner told the B.C. Legislature
last October.
"Land use issues are probably the most controversial aspect of the treaty," says Baird.
"But our community will benefit from the revenue brought in by industrial development."
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| Treaty talk |
“There is nothing wrong with trying make some money, but the important question is if the people making the money understand the impact their decisions will have on the land. The environmental issues are greater than the need for money.” — John Cummins, M.P., Delta - Richmond East
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