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Nathan Cullen – Truth or Liar?

Let me start with an apology, not to Nathan but to The Epoch Times who first published the following. Sorry we need it for educational purposes (our excuse to copy-paste) and were and sticking to it. To find out truth or lies, we need to do our homework. The following is from Feb 2024. Read the original here.  Ah but there is more, below it we have an update from Castanet.net its a lot newer from September 11th 2024, likewise we apologize but we needed proof on if or not Nathan was caught lying once again? Read the original story here. Despite Nathan’s word that they will not proceed, all the documents are still in effect, they just need to get re-elected and bam, its over, they get to do us in once again. Then there was one more, B.C. NDP refusal to compensate hunting guides sends a chilling message

 

 

 

Nathan Cullen says there’s no veto. Cullen, British Columbia’s Minister of Water, Land, and Resource Stewardship, plans to give First Nations joint decision-making authority over Crown land. His NDP government recently opened consultations on its proposal to amend the B.C. Land Act, under which the minister grants leases, licences, permits, rights-of-way and land sales. The amendments will give legal effect to agreements with Indigenous governing bodies. Those agreements will share decision-making power “through joint or consent models” with some or all of B.C.’s more than 200 First Nations.

Yes, First Nations will have a veto.

Cullen denies it. “There is no veto in these amendments,” he told the Nanaimo News Bulletin last week. He accused critics of fearmongering and misinformation. “My worry is that for some of the political actors here on the right, this is an element of dog-whistle politics.”

But Cullen has a problem. Any activity that requires your consent is an activity over which you have a veto. If a contract requires approval of both parties before something can happen, “no” by one means “no” for both. The same is true in other areas of law such as sexual conduct, which requires consent. If you withhold your consent, you have vetoed the activity. “Joint decision-making,” “consent,” and “veto” come out to the same thing.

Land use decisions are subject to the same logic. The B.C. government will give First Nations joint decision-making power, when and where agreements are entered into. Its own consultation materials say so. This issue has blown up in the media, and the government has hastily amended its consultation webpage to soothe discontent (“The proposed amendments to the Land Act will not lead to broad, sweeping, or automatic changes (or) provide a ‘veto.’”) Nothing to see here folks. But its documentation continues to describe “shared decision-making through joint or consent models.”

These proposals should not surprise anyone. In 2019, the B.C. legislature passed Bill 41, the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA). It requires the government to take “all measures necessary” to make the laws of British Columbia consistent with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP).

UNDRIP is a declaration of the U.N. General Assembly passed in 2007. It says that Indigenous people have “the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired… to own, use, develop and control.”

On its own, UNDRIP is non-binding and unenforceable. But DRIPA seeks to incorporate UNDRIP into B.C. law, obligating the government to achieve its aspirations. Mere consultation with First Nations, which Section 35 of the Constitution requires, won’t cut it under UNDRIP. Under Section 7 of DRIPA, agreements to be made with indigenous groups are to establish joint decision-making or to require consent of the Indigenous group. Either Cullen creates a First Nations veto or falls short of the goalposts in DRIPA. He is talking out of both sides of his mouth.

Some commentators warned against these dangers long ago. For example, shortly after DRIPA was passed in 2019, Vancouver lawyer Robin Junger wrote in the Vancouver Sun, “It will likely be impossible for government to live up to the expectations that Indigenous groups will now reasonably hold, without fundamentally affecting the rights and interests of third parties.” Unfortunately, few wanted to tackle that thorny question head on at the time. All three political parties in B.C. voted in favour of DRIPA, which passed unanimously.

For a taste of how Land Act changes could work, ask some B.C. residents who have private docks. In Pender Harbour, for instance, the shishalh Nation and the province have jointly developed a “Dock Management Plan” to try and impose various new and onerous rules on private property owners (including red “no go” zones and rules that will make many existing docks and boat houses non-compliant). Property owners with long-standing docks in full legal compliance will have no right to negotiate, to be consulted, or to be grandfathered. Land Act amendments may hardwire this plan into B.C. law.

Yet Cullen insists that no veto will exist since aggrieved parties can apply to a court for judicial review. “[An agreement] holds both parties—B.C. and whichever nation we enter into an agreement (with)—to the same standard of judicial review, administrative fairness, all the things that courts protect when someone is going through an application or a tendering process,” he told Business in Vancouver.

This is nonsense on stilts. By that standard, no government official has final authority under any statute. All statutory decisions are potentially subject to judicial review, including decisions of Cullen himself as the minister responsible for the Land Act. He doesn’t have a veto? Of course he does. Moreover, courts on judicial review generally defer to statutory decision-makers. And they don’t change decisions but merely send them back to be made again. The argument that First Nations won’t have a veto because their decisions can be challenged on judicial review is legal jibber jabber.

When the U.N. passed UNDRIP in 2007, people said they can’t be serious. When the B.C. legislature passed DRIPA in 2019, people said they can’t be serious. The B.C. government now proposes to give First Nations a veto over the use of Crown land. Don’t worry, they can’t be serious.

 

 


Now the other story.

B.C.’s DRIPA Indigenous rights law faces legal challenge

Rights law faces challenge

The B.C. government’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA) is about to face its first legal challenge.

The Pender Harbour and Area Residents Association (PHARA) is going to court to seek a ruling that, one way or another, DRIPA is unconstitutional.

According to a petition filed today in B.C. Supreme Court, it is unconstitutional because it conflicts with Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution, and the B.C. government exceeded its authority when it passed an order in council granting the Shíshálh (Sechelt) First Nation co-management powers over docks.

It seeks a declaration from the court that DRIPA is “unconstitutional and inconsistent with section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 and is, to the extent of such inconsistency, of no force and effect.”

Alternatively, it seeks a declaration that DRIPA is unconstitutional because it “violates the democratic rights guaranteed by section 3 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms … by authorizing the transference of governance powers to an entity that is not responsible to the Legislative Assembly or the electorate of British Columbia.”

It also seeks an order preventing the Lieutenant Governor in Council or any minister of the Crown from entering into any agreements pursuant to Section 7 of DRIPA.

The PHARA has been fighting the B.C. government over its decision to invest the Shíshálh with co-management powers over dock tenures on the Sunshine Coast. Joint decision-making is provided for under Section 7 of DRIPA.

The shíshálh swiya Dock Management Plan covers an area from Lang Bay to Roberts Creek on the Sunshine Coast. It has implications for all private dock owners and boathouse owners.

DRIPA is the B.C. government’s enabling legislation for the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).

“We strongly support reconciliation, but people have become divided by the DRIPA, so we look forward to the court ruling and giving some certainty to everyone,” PHARA president Peter Robson said in a press release. “While court is the last place we want to be, we feel this step is necessary and we are committed to it.”

The legal challenge is getting the support of Ellis Ross – the current MLA for Skeena and former Haisla First Nation chief who is now running federally for the Conservative Party.

“I have spent my career studying section 35 constitutionally protected Aboriginal rights and used them to help my region develop and prosper,” he says in a PHARA press release. “DRIPA in its current form is complicating things and causing division. I look forward to what the court has to say on this important legal challenge.”

Tom Isaac, author of the book Aboriginal Law, said the case raises important questions over the limits of provincial lawmakers with respect to aboriginal rights.

This case tackles the fundamental question of whether a single Canadian province can develop its own Indigenous rights laws, and whether that can be squared with the Indigenous rights framework already found in Canada’s Constitution and related case law,” Isaac said.

“These are serious questions that until now have not received the attention they deserve. And because this affects how Indigenous rights are balanced with other people’s rights, it is an important case for every British Columbian and will be followed very closely by the legal community.”

The B.C. government has been going through a process of harmonizing provincial laws with DRIPA, which has caused some concerns for resource industries with respect to who has ultimate jurisdiction over land and resources.

Concerns arose in January, for example, when the B.C. government attempted changes to the Land Act to allow for consent-based agreements with First Nations.

The government backed off from the Land Act changes after it got push-back from landowners and resource companies, which expressed concerns over private property rights and access to Crown land.

“British Columbia’s unusual ‘go it alone’ approach to pursuing reconciliation with Indigenous peoples carries risk for many business operators as well as for the overall investment climate,” Jock Finlayson, chief economist for the Independent Contractors and Businesses Association (ICBA), said in

PHARA’s press release.

“Among other things, the government’s actions and policy proposals presented over the last year or so are likely to foster greater uncertainty for the private sector. British Columbians need to work together to build a fair, prosperous economy that welcomes investment and encourages productive entrepreneurship.”

 


 

B.C. NDP refusal to compensate hunting guides sends a chilling message

 

Vaughn Palmer: In refusing promised compensation, NDP likely acted our of a fear of setting precedents for its secretive plans for Crown land

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Published Jun 28, 2024  •  4 minute read
NATHAN CULLEN
Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Nathan Cullen speaks during a news conference in Vancouver, on Friday, Nov. 3, 2023. Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESS

VICTORIA — While B.C. marked the 10th anniversary of the Tsilhqot’in Aboriginal title case this week, there was grim news for guide outfitters whose livelihoods were put at risk by the landmark court decision.

A group of five outfitters lost access to key hunting grounds when the Supreme Court of Canada recognized Tsilhqot’in title over substantial tracts of Crown land in the Chilcotin plateau.

The five have waited for years to be compensated for the effective loss of their provincially granted guide outfitting tenures. But in the past week they learned that the provincial government had turned down a recommended compensation package for the second time.

Doug McMann, owner of Skinner Creek Hunts with his wife Julie, got the devastating news in a phone call from a provincial official.

“I’m 55 years old and, honestly, we’re going broke,” McMann told Rob Shaw of the Northern Beat online news service.

“We’ve sucked this up for years and watched our savings go out the door every year with the province (saying) we are going to make you whole. In the name of reconciliation, we are losing our livelihoods and losing our businesses and savings.”

McMann wasn’t disputing the court decision or its consequences in terms of the land transfer.

“I don’t want to give the impression that we are blaming the First Nation, it’s the furthest thing from the truth,” he told the reporter. “The land has been declared title for them. It’s theirs. They need reparations and funding. But holy Christ, man, why should I lose everything I’ve got?”

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