Hailing as a record from government leaders and natives who spoke out in the revelation, the plan outlines a list of “significant actions” the province promises to take in consultation and cooperation with indigenous peoples.
The chairman of the BC Assembly of First Nations, Jerry Jack, said the document paved the way for a renewed relationship with the government and reconciliation.
“I commend this important effort,” Jack said. “What [Indigenous Peoples] have passed are many generations. I went with my dad to a blockade in the 1970s, fighting for our rights. “I do not want my grandchildren to continue to fight for our rights, our land back.”
The 89 actions address a wide range of issues, including governance, land and water management, salmon, education, anti-indigenous racism, child welfare, policing and justice, data collection, health healthcare, sports and leisure, indigenous languages, climate change, toponyms BC, cannabis policy and high speed internet access.
Each of the 89 actions indicates which provincial ministry is responsible for its implementation.
Prime Minister John Horgan described the plan as a roadmap to become “what has never been done on planet Earth in the past”.
“This … is a first for any government in the world. It will lead to a transformative change in relation to indigenous peoples and help us build a brighter future for all,” Horgan said.
BC became the first jurisdiction in North America to be adopted by UNDRIP when the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was voted unanimously by the legislature in 2019.
Rosalie Yazzie of the Council of Justice of the First Nations of BC. called for swift action on the justice front to address inherent racism and the over-representation of indigenous peoples in the judiciary.
“We can not ask people who are suffering the way so many indigenous peoples keep waiting. We are either making changes that address this issue in real ways or we are failing,” he said.
“Reconciliation is a process that takes us all out of our comfort zone and if you do not feel uncomfortable you are not doing it right.”
Murray Rankin, the minister for relations and reconciliation with the natives, defended the plan as more than ambitious, saying the 89 actions were “tangible, measurable and achievable” in five years.
“We will be accountable every year in a real way,” Rankin said. “[The plan] it will not collect dust, it can not, it is not allowed “.
BC Green MLA Adam Olsen, member of the Tsartlip First Nation, criticized the action plan as “popular[ing] the basis for excuse “.
“The measure of success is not what we hear but what we see. Twenty-eight months after the law was unanimously passed in the legislature, this government is just moving forward,” he said. “This plan describes the goals for reconciliation, but not the measures to achieve them.”
title: “B.C. Reveals 89 Point Action Plan To Advance The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples " ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-27” author: “Lucille Laguna”
Hailing as a record from government leaders and natives who spoke out in the revelation, the plan outlines a list of “significant actions” the province promises to take in consultation and cooperation with indigenous peoples.
The chairman of the BC Assembly of First Nations, Jerry Jack, said the document paved the way for a renewed relationship with the government and reconciliation.
“I commend this important effort,” Jack said. “What [Indigenous Peoples] have passed are many generations. I went with my dad to a blockade in the 1970s, fighting for our rights. “I do not want my grandchildren to continue to fight for our rights, our land back.”
The 89 actions address a wide range of issues, including governance, land and water management, salmon, education, anti-indigenous racism, child welfare, policing and justice, data collection, health healthcare, sports and leisure, indigenous languages, climate change, toponyms BC, cannabis policy and high speed internet access.
Each of the 89 actions indicates which provincial ministry is responsible for its implementation.
Prime Minister John Horgan described the plan as a roadmap to become “what has never been done on planet Earth in the past”.
“This … is a first for any government in the world. It will lead to a transformative change in relation to indigenous peoples and help us build a brighter future for all,” Horgan said.
BC became the first jurisdiction in North America to be adopted by UNDRIP when the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was voted unanimously by the legislature in 2019.
Rosalie Yazzie of the Council of Justice of the First Nations of BC. called for swift action on the justice front to address inherent racism and the over-representation of indigenous peoples in the judiciary.
“We can not ask people who are suffering the way so many indigenous peoples keep waiting. We are either making changes that address this issue in real ways or we are failing,” he said.
“Reconciliation is a process that takes us all out of our comfort zone and if you do not feel uncomfortable you are not doing it right.”
Murray Rankin, the minister for relations and reconciliation with the natives, defended the plan as more than ambitious, saying the 89 actions were “tangible, measurable and achievable” in five years.
“We will be accountable every year in a real way,” Rankin said. “[The plan] it will not collect dust, it can not, it is not allowed “.
BC Green MLA Adam Olsen, member of the Tsartlip First Nation, criticized the action plan as “popular[ing] the basis for excuse “.
“The measure of success is not what we hear but what we see. Twenty-eight months after the law was unanimously passed in the legislature, this government is just moving forward,” he said. “This plan describes the goals for reconciliation, but not the measures to achieve them.”