Don't Throw First Nations Under the Bus

Updated:
22.04.2026

The Trump tariffs have got the right-wing running scared. BC's Premier David Eby and his government are terrified of reduced profits for extractive industries like Big Mining and Big Forestry.

Instead of making those industries pay their fair share in terms of stumpage fees and taxes, instead the government of David Eby gives them freebies in order to 'stimulate the economy.'  He is perpetuating a system that rips off all BC citizens. These companies exploit public resources and walk away with the profits, leaving us with the denuded forests that left unmolested would have mitigated the climate crisis and sustained our life-support systems, leaving us with mines that leach toxic waste into the water we drink.

And then -- the absolute height of scapegoating -- in response to pressure from industry groups that are kicking back against Indigenous People having some say about what happens in their territories -- Eby proposed 'pausing' (i.e. get rid of) the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA), a piece of BC legislation that brings us into line with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Industry cries boo-hoo, their profits might be reduced a tiny bit... and Eby responded by saying he will happily toss fundamental Indigenous rights out the window.

Even though the NDP is supposed to be a left-wing party that stands for labour, the environment and ‘the people,’ in practical fact Eby's government has shown itself to be firmly in the camp of putting the profits of private industry first. And he's clearly willing to throw First Nations in BC under the bus to do it, even though Eby himself was the Attorney General when DRIPA was passed with great applause and fanfare. How can he look himself in the mirror every morning?

There's one little problem for Eby and his ilk if they try to toss out DRIPA: Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution Act. It affirms and recognizes the prior occupation of Canada by organized, autonomous societies. It recognizes that the lands over which the British Crown claimed colonial sovereignty were already occupied then, and remain occupied now, by Indigenous societies with their own laws, cultures, and traditions. And it affirms fundamental Indigenous rights with these words: "The existing Aboriginal and treaty rights of the Aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed."

Tossing out DRIPA is a terrible way to treat Indigenous People who have already been treated so badly by colonial society.

As Chief Roger William of the Xeni Gwet'in First Nations Government said in an opinion piece in the Vancouver Sun: "Time and again, First Nations have shown care and respect for the private property of our neighbours, even when those lands were wrongly taken from us in the past. We have seen the same care and respect from the Haida Nation, and the Quw’utsun Nation, among others. It is frustrating to see these genuine efforts by First Nations toward reconciliation met by misinformation and fearmongering. Since first contact, Indigenous peoples have been vilified and portrayed as the enemy, while in reality we have faced the relentless taking of our lands, culture, language, and way of life."

Chief Roger, we stand with you! Here is what our organization stands for:

As a registered charity in Canada operating within the rules of a colonial government system, Haven for Ecology seeks to use our settler privilege to be good allies with Indigenous Peoples and to support work toward decolonization. We advocate for justice and recognition for Indigenous Peoples, and we honour the guidance and direction of the First Nations and Indigenous Peoples in the areas where we steward properties.

We recognize and respect that the lands of what some call ‘British Columbia’ are in fact the unceded territories of a diverse multitude of First Peoples. We work respectfully with Indigenous Peoples, recognizing their prior occupation of, and caretaker relationship to, their lands and territories. We support Indigenous allies and work toward justice, decolonization and reconciliation.

Lorna Visser

Executive Director, Haven for Ecology

Post by:
Lorna Visser
,
Executive Director, Haven for Ecology