Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. First Nation sets out tougher rules for mining in its territory

Darpan News Desk, Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2014 12:19 PM
  • B.C. First Nation sets out tougher rules for mining in its territory

WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — A group of B.C. First Nations says it has created a detailed set of mining rules that will dictate how resource companies and governments operate in its territory.

The Northern Shuswap Tribal Council, representing four aboriginal bands in the central Interior, says its new mining policy will be applied to all existing, proposed and future projects that impact its traditional territory around Williams Lake.

The 54-page document was developed with the help of experts when the Xat'sull (hat-sull) First Nation commissioned the project last year.

Xat'sull Chief Bev Sellars says the document spells out the policy clearly and means the province and industry can no longer claim that they don't know how to work with First Nations.

The policy does not override B.C. laws but the group says it will serve as indigenous law for anyone doing mining business in over five-million hectares of traditional First Nations territory.

Although the nations involved were affected by the Mount Polley mine breach in August, Northern Shuswap mining co-ordinator Jacinda Mack says the policy was in the works long before the tailings pond collapsed.

MORE National ARTICLES

Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare

Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare
A city west of Toronto has been named the least affordable place in Canada for regulated daycare. The study, titled The Parent Trap and released by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, says childcare rates in Brampton, Ont., are the most disproportionate in the country.

Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare

Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver

Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver
VANCOUVER — Music icon Neil Young says Canadians need to stand up for clean air, land and water by taking on big oil companies in particular.

Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver

Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition

Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition
VANCOUVER — When tribute is paid on Remembrance Day to the soldiers, sailors and flyers killed in the service of Canada during two world wars, Canadians also need to think about citizenship, say two advocacy groups.

Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition

Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused

Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused
TORONTO — The girlfriend of a man who killed two people when he opened fire at Toronto's Eaton Centre says he told her he got himself into "some trouble" and was "going away for a really long time."

Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused

New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes

New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes
TORONTO — From the notorious rape and murder of two Ontario school girls to the notorious wrongful conviction of Thomas Sophonow in Manitoba, from the grisly to the tragic to the weird, Canada has thrown up its share of riveting, horrific and even bizarre criminal cases.

New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes

TPP deal getting closer as logjam's are broken, Obama, Harper, other leaders say

TPP deal getting closer as logjam's are broken, Obama, Harper, other leaders say
BEIJING — Prime Minister Stephen Harper and 11 other world leaders said Monday they're inching ever closer to an agreement on the proposed Asia-Pacific trade deal as a crucial year-end deadline approaches.

TPP deal getting closer as logjam's are broken, Obama, Harper, other leaders say