Sounds like Eby wasn’t reciting his land acknowledgements enough… Moving forward he should start with citing it before each meal followed by an hour of self reflection.
_bl3wb1rd_ on
suspend? how about revoke
Cecicestunepipe on
180 Dave at it again.
Friendly-Olive-3465 on
I guess Eby has realized it’s hard to govern a province that has been reconciled out of existence
Hot_Restaurant_7408 on
Eby the traitor
Birdybadass on
“Suspend” because he really wants to revoke it but he wants to put it off until a BCCon government is in place so the NDP can campaign on blaming them instead.
TheBannaMeister on
Thank you B.C for being the guinea pig for this shit 🙏🙏🙏
littlebaldboi on
Elect an activist. This is what you get
HurlinVermin on
BC goverment, meet unintended consequences.
If I were a taxpayer in that province, I’d be mighty interested to know what all this backpedalling is going to cost in terms of court fights with FN and debating/redoing legislation.
It’s a quagmire, sans the giggity giggity.
cyclinginvancouver on
British Columbia’s government has proposed suspending its Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, according to two sources in a meeting between Premier David Eby and First Nations leaders.
One of the sources says a three-year suspension of the legislation has been proposed, while the other didn’t give a time frame
One of the sources told The Canadian Press that the proposal “effectively places every section of DRIPA” that the government wanted to replace under suspension for three years, and that changes to the legislation would be made later.
DRIPA has been cited by First Nations involved in two landmark court victories last year that sparked concern about implications for private land ownership and the province’s mining rules.
The source said the plan was to give time for the Supreme Court of Canada to weigh in, while the second source who confirmed the suspension proposal says there was “complete opposition” from First Nations at the meeting.
First Nations leaders have warned of legal action if Eby’s government proceeds with amending DRIPA.
More than 130 civil society organizations, including the B.C. Federation of Labour, have also called on Eby to leave the bill alone.
Eby’s government proposed changes to the bill in a letter and document in late March shared with some First Nations leaders under a confidentiality agreement.
The proposed changes, seen by The Canadian Press, show the province was looking to rework the wording to promise “ongoing processes” to align “select” legislation with the bill, known as DRIPA.
The current wording of the “Purpose of the Act” section says it is “to affirm the application of the Declaration to the laws of British Columbia.”
Eby said earlier that his government was trying its best to work with chiefs across the province to address concerns about the two court decisions, which both cited DRIPA and sided with First Nations on mining and property rights.
The B.C. government has said that wasn’t the intention of the law.
One found the provincial mineral claims regime is “inconsistent” with DRIPA, and another recognized the Cowichan Tribes’ Aboriginal title on land along the Fraser River, saying titles held by Canada and the City of Richmond were “defective and invalid.”
In response to the mineral claims case, Eby has said it’s “crucial that it is British Columbians, through their elected representatives, that remain in control of this process, not the courts.”
“Too much rides on it in terms of our province’s prosperity and certainty going forward,” the premier said last month.
Gym_frere on
BC First Nations are some of the most entitled people on earth
They have a provincial government that’s gone out of their way, at great political cost, to accommodate them and their desires. How do First Nations respond? By castigating him, taking him to court, and refusing to compromise on anything.
The reality is this; they can compromise with the government. Or they can have a conservative government in 3 years time that will make it their singular purpose to fight First Nations.
So far it’s not looking good.
TheGriffin on
Eby going to be running for BC Conservative party leadership soon, eh?
Unlucky_Accountant71 on
Good. Dripa is backwards.
Eby did a backend deal. Left the Publix out of it and then played dumb when asked about his involvement.
Lawyer who’s just acting oblivious btw
resolutelyperhaps on
We should follow the USA and back out of the ICC too. International laws and guidelines are stupid. /s
Clearly it’s a complicated issue and the implementation has been poor, but the instant dismissal of DRIPA is pretty sad. A lot of work by a lot of people around the world went into the framework. We are still failing a lot of the recommendations of our own TRC as well. But people are clearly just completely exhausted from the decade or two we’ve been working on reconciliation.
Mens-Real on
Native rights were never meant to cause us to be seen as an unstable place to invest. The courts have taken this too far.
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
15 Kommentare
Sounds like Eby wasn’t reciting his land acknowledgements enough… Moving forward he should start with citing it before each meal followed by an hour of self reflection.
suspend? how about revoke
180 Dave at it again.
I guess Eby has realized it’s hard to govern a province that has been reconciled out of existence
Eby the traitor
“Suspend” because he really wants to revoke it but he wants to put it off until a BCCon government is in place so the NDP can campaign on blaming them instead.
Thank you B.C for being the guinea pig for this shit 🙏🙏🙏
Elect an activist. This is what you get
BC goverment, meet unintended consequences.
If I were a taxpayer in that province, I’d be mighty interested to know what all this backpedalling is going to cost in terms of court fights with FN and debating/redoing legislation.
It’s a quagmire, sans the giggity giggity.
British Columbia’s government has proposed suspending its Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, according to two sources in a meeting between Premier David Eby and First Nations leaders.
One of the sources says a three-year suspension of the legislation has been proposed, while the other didn’t give a time frame
One of the sources told The Canadian Press that the proposal “effectively places every section of DRIPA” that the government wanted to replace under suspension for three years, and that changes to the legislation would be made later.
DRIPA has been cited by First Nations involved in two landmark court victories last year that sparked concern about implications for private land ownership and the province’s mining rules.
The source said the plan was to give time for the Supreme Court of Canada to weigh in, while the second source who confirmed the suspension proposal says there was “complete opposition” from First Nations at the meeting.
First Nations leaders have warned of legal action if Eby’s government proceeds with amending DRIPA.
More than 130 civil society organizations, including the B.C. Federation of Labour, have also called on Eby to leave the bill alone.
Eby’s government proposed changes to the bill in a letter and document in late March shared with some First Nations leaders under a confidentiality agreement.
The proposed changes, seen by The Canadian Press, show the province was looking to rework the wording to promise “ongoing processes” to align “select” legislation with the bill, known as DRIPA.
The current wording of the “Purpose of the Act” section says it is “to affirm the application of the Declaration to the laws of British Columbia.”
Eby said earlier that his government was trying its best to work with chiefs across the province to address concerns about the two court decisions, which both cited DRIPA and sided with First Nations on mining and property rights.
The B.C. government has said that wasn’t the intention of the law.
One found the provincial mineral claims regime is “inconsistent” with DRIPA, and another recognized the Cowichan Tribes’ Aboriginal title on land along the Fraser River, saying titles held by Canada and the City of Richmond were “defective and invalid.”
In response to the mineral claims case, Eby has said it’s “crucial that it is British Columbians, through their elected representatives, that remain in control of this process, not the courts.”
“Too much rides on it in terms of our province’s prosperity and certainty going forward,” the premier said last month.
BC First Nations are some of the most entitled people on earth
They have a provincial government that’s gone out of their way, at great political cost, to accommodate them and their desires. How do First Nations respond? By castigating him, taking him to court, and refusing to compromise on anything.
The reality is this; they can compromise with the government. Or they can have a conservative government in 3 years time that will make it their singular purpose to fight First Nations.
So far it’s not looking good.
Eby going to be running for BC Conservative party leadership soon, eh?
Good. Dripa is backwards.
Eby did a backend deal. Left the Publix out of it and then played dumb when asked about his involvement.
Lawyer who’s just acting oblivious btw
We should follow the USA and back out of the ICC too. International laws and guidelines are stupid. /s
Clearly it’s a complicated issue and the implementation has been poor, but the instant dismissal of DRIPA is pretty sad. A lot of work by a lot of people around the world went into the framework. We are still failing a lot of the recommendations of our own TRC as well. But people are clearly just completely exhausted from the decade or two we’ve been working on reconciliation.
Native rights were never meant to cause us to be seen as an unstable place to invest. The courts have taken this too far.