B.C. reaches revenue-sharing, land-management deals with McLeod Lake Indian Band - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:13 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. reaches revenue-sharing, land-management deals with McLeod Lake Indian Band

The Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Ministry says in a statement the revenue-sharing agreement will assess and manage the impacts of industrial development while assuring certainty to industries working within McLeod Lake territories.

Chief says agreements will ensure future generations 'will inherit a more prosperous nation'

Chief Harley Chingee of the McLeod Lake Indian Band stands in front of greenery in Victoria. He is wearing a black jacket and is speaking in front of several microphones.
Chief Harley Chingee of the McLeod Lake Indian Band speaks at a news conference in Victoria on Wednesday. (CBC News )

The chief of a First Nation in northeastBritish Columbia says revenue-sharing and land-management agreements reached with the province will ensure future prosperity for his people.

Chief Harley Chingee of the McLeod Lake Indian Band says the agreements will benefit today's members while providing healthy lands for future generations.

Chingee made the comments Wednesday at a news conference at the B.C. Legislature flanked by three provincial government cabinet ministers.

He says McLeod Lakewill work collaboratively with the government and the area's Treaty 8 Nations, most of which have signed similar agreements with the province.

The Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Ministry saidin a statement the revenue-sharing agreement will assess and manage the impacts of industrial development while assuring certainty to industries working within McLeod Lake territories.

The government statement did not provide a cost estimate of the revenue-sharing agreement, but says it includes a shared fund to help heal land through restoration activities chosen by the First Nation.

"One of our core values of McLeod Lake is making sure the footsteps we leave behind are the ones our children will be proud to walk in,"Chingee said.

"These agreements will benefit not only our present members but also future generations, who will inherit a more prosperous nation."