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magazine / apr08 / indepth

In-depth
Landmark land settlement
Canada’s first modern, urban treaty gives the Tsawwassen First Nation control of its land and the chance at a prosperous future

December 8, 2006 - When all the negotiations were complete, a ceremony was held for the initialing of the Final Agreement.
Video courtesy of: Government of British Columbia, Ministry of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation.


Lone Voice Defies TFN Treaty Manipulation
Tsawwassen band member Bertha Williams opposes the new treaty as she feels it will eliminate part of the TFN’s identity. Video courtesy of: Damien Gillis


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Maps
Explore the land and the development
Photo Gallery
See the landscapes and faces of Tsawwassen
Video Gallery
Watch clips of the treaty process & the opposition
Timelines
View historic highlights & the steps of the treaty’s creation

Landmark land settlement
Introduction
The importance of treaties
Terms of the treaty

Feature Story
No Reservations

Tsawwassen First Nation
History & Ancestry

Business Interests
Current & Future Projects

Opposition Q&As
Grand Chief Stewart Phillip
Mayor Lois Jackson
Councillor Harold Steves
M.P. John Cummins

Archives
Songs of the Nass

Treaty talk
“People that have journeyed in our canoes, sang our songs, hunted in our territories, taught our young and learned from our elders have worked on the treaty. This will be a Tsawwassen government of Tsawwassen people with Tsawwassen values.”
—Andrew Bak, Tsawwassen councillor, community meeting July 7, 2007
view all »   
Resources
  • Tsawwassen First Nation
  • Ministry of Aboriginal Relations & Reconciliation
  • INAC Backgrounder
  • BC Treaty Commission
  • Settling Land Claims
  • Agricultural Land Reserve
  • Vancouver Port Authority
  • Rethinking the Reserve
  • 2006 Census Release


    Contributors
    Sheri Gagnon
    Katherine Gordon
    Carol Hilton
    Rachel MacNeill
    Ronan Rushe
    Michela Rosano
    Sheryl Rafuse


  • Comments on this articleView all comments (6) | Leave a comment

    According to my understanding, there is very few fertile land in the world. The population is increasing, but the fertile land is decreasing day by day. Canada occupies 7% of the world's land but we have limited fertile land. Tsawwassen land is one of the most fertile lands in BC. If we use such a fertile land for other purposes than farming, there will be negative impact in ecosystem. Infrastructure like an airport, port, housing, roads, railway etc should be constructed on a non-fertile land. We have to think sustainable development. So Tsawwassen Treaty is concern only for business purposes - it only tried to make money by constructing a port instead of farming.

    Submitted by Basu Dev Gaudel on Tuesday, November 25, 2008


    The treaty was driven by the Gateway - the provincial plan to expand the port and connect it with new and wider highways. This ignores the collapse of the US dollar, the steep decline in cross Pacific container traffic, the availability of new routres such as the North West passage and the widened Panama Canal and the key role played by the railways in moving transcontinental freight. All these issues are dealt at length in my blog - stephenrees.wordpress.com and on the Livable Region web site
    livableregion.ca.

    This is typical of the short term thinking that bedevils our political system. We need to take a strategic view of how our world is changing - and how to cope with that. Unfortunately, the appeals to justice in the TFN process have been ignored by the grab for the quick buck. A sad day for Canada and the Tsawwassen, who both deserve much better leaders with real vision

    Submitted by Stephen Rees on Monday, April 28, 2008


    The TFN treaty was done without proper consideration of the Semiahmoo First Nation treaty, the protection of our Agricultural Land Reserve, or the Environment. This is not about giving TFN its due... its about expanding DeltaPort at the expense of our farmland, the Fraser River estuary, and our air quality in a area that shouldn't have been considered for a port in the first place. Tsawwassen First Nations accepted individual cash payouts from the government for signing the treaty and now we will all have to live with the blight of container sprawl on some of the best farmland and most important wildlife habitat in the world.

    Submitted by Don Hunt on Monday, April 28, 2008


    View all comments (6)

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