Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Says Proposed Saskatchewan Trespass Law Changes Are Divisive

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Mar, 2019 09:43 PM

    REGINA — An Opposition member is accusing the Saskatchewan government of playing wedge politics and excluding Indigenous voices with its proposed changes to the province's trespass laws.

     

    Buckley Belanger, the NDP member for the northern constituency of Athabasca, made the remarks in the legislature Wednesday during a debate about the Trespass to Property Amendment Act.


    Introduced last November, the legislation would require people to get permission before going on private land, reversing the onus from landowners having to indicate if they do not want visitors.


    Although many rural residents and community leaders support the change, Belanger said the bill is divisive and called it a politically motivated move to "simply appease a small minority."


    He accused the government of not consulting or listening to Indigenous leaders and hunters.


    "If I continue seeing that kind of politics coming out of the Saskatchewan Party, then you begin to question your role as an Indigenous person in this assembly," said Belanger, who is Metis.


    "When do we begin to count? When does our opinion matter?"


    He said the government should be putting forward legislation that is inclusive and addresses the root causes of crime.


    The proposed changes were introduced more than two years after Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, was killed on a farm in rural Saskatchewan.


    A jury acquitted farmer Gerald Stanley of second-degree murder after he testified his gun went off accidentally when he was trying to scare off some young people who drove onto his property.


    Belanger called the legislation an affront to democracy and talked about his father, a Metis man from northern Saskatchewan who served in the Second World War.


    "That's not what my father envisioned when he served this country," he said.


    "That's not what I envisioned when I became part of the provincial legislative assembly."


    Justice Minister Don Morgan said he does not believe the bill is divisive and expressed disappointment at Belanger's remarks.


    He said the amendments bring Saskatchewan in line with Alberta and other provinces and balances the rights of property owners and the public.


    "Essentially it says you don't need to post your land anymore to maintain your property rights."


    Morgan said First Nation treaty rights would be respected and he has spoken with the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations, which represents 74 First Nations in the province.


    "The goal of this is to prevent people from walking around on other people's land carrying firearms," he said.


    While some Indigenous leaders have expressed concerns that the proposed changes could lead to confrontations with landowners, Morgan said he believes otherwise.


    "If someone obtains consent before they go on the land we're far less likely to have an incident."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged With Fraud In Money-Raising Schemes For Humboldt Broncos

    SASKATOON — RCMP in Saskatchewan say a man has been charged after two fake fundraising efforts for the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team were discovered.

    Man Charged With Fraud In Money-Raising Schemes For Humboldt Broncos

    Sunwing Pilot Temperature Typo Could Have Had 'Catastrophic' Results: Report

    A report by the U.K.'s Air Accidents Investigation Branch says the Boeing Co. 737 lifted off at the "extreme end" of a runway in Belfast after the autopilot determined the takeoff speed based on a temperature of -52 C, rather than 16 C.

    Sunwing Pilot Temperature Typo Could Have Had 'Catastrophic' Results: Report

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser
    VICTORIA — A special adviser to the Speaker at British Columbia's legislature says an ongoing RCMP investigation is focusing on the roles and administrative duties of the clerk of the house and its sergeant-at-arms.

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser

    Otter 6, Humans 0 In Battle Of Wits To Oust Koi Muncher From Vancouver Garden

    VANCOUVER — A river otter with a taste for valuable koi carp may also have a flair for drama as it continues to avoid humane traps and confound efforts to remove it from a classical Chinese garden in downtown Vancouver.

    Otter 6, Humans 0 In Battle Of Wits To Oust Koi Muncher From Vancouver Garden

    Feds Studying Birth Tourism As New Data Shows Higher Non-Resident Birth Rates

    The federal government is studying the issue of "birth tourism" with a view to better understand the scope of this practice within Canada and its impacts.

    Feds Studying Birth Tourism As New Data Shows Higher Non-Resident Birth Rates

    B.C. Liberals Raise Questions About Speaker's Role In Ongoing Police Probe

    B.C. Liberals Raise Questions About Speaker's Role In Ongoing Police Probe
    Liberal house leader Mary Polak released a sworn affidavit today saying Speaker Darryl Plecas told the three house leaders on Monday that he wanted Alan Mullen appointed the acting sergeant-at-arms.

    B.C. Liberals Raise Questions About Speaker's Role In Ongoing Police Probe