Rivermen leading league standings following two more victories
By Sam Laskaris Writer The Six Nations Rivermen continue to tinker with their roster. But one thing is remaining constant. The local Senior B lacrosse club continues to rack up victories. The Rivermen now find themselves on a nine-game winning streak after registering two more wins this past weekend. For starters, the Six Nations club downed the visiting Owen Sound North Stars 13-7 this past Saturday. That match was held at the Six Nations Sports and Cultural Memorial Centre. And then on Sunday a shortstaffed Rivermen club pulled out a 9-7 triumph over the host Ennismore James Gang. That tilt was at the Robert E. Young Recreation Complex in Ennismore. The Rivermen only had 14 runners and two goalies show up for the contest in Ennismore. “Some of the guys...
Sports Briefly: Mann Cup , Arrows and more
By Sam Laskaris Writer First-place battle A game that was supposed to feature a pair of undefeated Major Series Lacrosse teams was postponed on Monday night. The defending national Mann Cup champions hit the road that night to square off against the Oakville Rock. But that match, at the Toronto Rock Athletic Centre in Oakville, was suspended early on and then postponed after an Oakville Rock player sustained a serious injury. A date for the rescheduled contest was not readily available. Both the Chiefs and Rock entered the game sporting perfect 3-0 records. Six Nations was hoping to improve its record on Tuesday night as it hosted the Brampton Excelsiors. That match, at the Iroquois Lacrosse Arena, was held after The Turtle Island News’ press deadline. The Chiefs will continue...
Tom Longboat descendant, Kristian Jamieson, running in his footsteps at marathons
By Austin Evans Writer Tom Longboat descendant Kristian Jamieson is on his way to the Chicago and Boston marathons after achieving the fastest time in the Niagara Ultra marathon in 10 years. Jamieson was one of 123 entrants who participated in Niagara Ultra’s marathon on June 15. He and the other runners lined up at Kinsmen Scout Hall at 7 am to undergo the 42.2-kilometre race. Jamieson not only outpaced the rest of this year’s runners, finishing 12 minutes ahead of second place, but nearly every runner since the marathon was introduced in 2008. His time of 2 hours 52 minutes and 55 seconds is the fastest finish in 10 years and the fourth-fastest time ever according to a representative from Niagara Ultra. Because of this performance, Jamieson has qualified...
US acknowledges Northwest dams have devastated the region’s Native tribes
The Associated Press SEATTLE (AP) — The U.S. government on Tuesday acknowledged, for the first time, the harmful role it has played over the past century in building and operating dams in the Pacific Northwest — dams that devastated Native American tribes by inundating their villages and decimating salmon runs while bringing electricity, irrigation and jobs to nearby communities. In a new report, the Biden administration said those cultural, spiritual and economic detriments continue to pain the tribes, which consider salmon part of their cultural and spiritual identity, as well as a crucial food source. The government downplayed or accepted the well-known risk to the fish in its drive for industrial development, converting the wealth of the tribes into the wealth of non-Native people, according to the report. “The government...
Indigenous creators tell their stories on TikTok
By Jeremy Appel, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter There aren’t many other Inuit people where Braden Kadlun resides. He moved to Calgary a couple years ago looking for a “fresh start” with his partner, whom he met after a stint in rehab on Eskasoni, a Mi’kmaq reserve near Cape Breton, N.S., to address an addiction to alcohol and stimulants. Now he’s able to embrace his Inuit culture and share his recovery journey with a large international audience on TikTok while he completes his undergraduate degree in philosophy at the University of Calgary, joining a growing number of young Indigenous TikTok creators. “I come from a small community of under 3,000 and I grew up in a community of 20,000, so reaching 200,000 [views] is mind boggling. And just having their support...
Third Indigenous child’s body to be exhumed in Quebec after 2021 law to help familie
The Canadian Press 18/06/2024 The body of a Cree child who attended a Quebec residential school and died in 1966 will be exhumed at her parents’ request so that her remains can be buried in her community. The disinterment request is the third since Quebec passed a law in 2021 intended to help Indigenous families learn more about the deaths and disappearances of their children in provincial health-care and social service institutions. Her body is being exhumed almost 60 years after she died in a Quebec hospital and was buried in the cemetery near the residential school without the knowledge of her parents, who only learned of her death months later. Awacak, a group helping Indigenous families learn about the fate of their children in Quebec’s health-care system, says the...
No timeline change for selecting nuclear waste site
IGNACE – The Nuclear Waste Management Organization still intends to choose a site for its waste repository project by the end of this year, a regional spokesperson for the industry-funded body said Tuesday. That’s notwithstanding a newspaper’s report indicating lukewarm support at best in First Nations near both final candidate sites. Neither Wabigoon Lake Ojibway Nation in the Northwest nor Saugeen Ojibway Nation near Lake Huron has yet scheduled a community vote related to the project, though Wabigoon Lake has said it will hold a vote in autumn. The NWMO has said whichever site is chosen must have host communities that are “informed and willing to accept the project.” But Vince Ponka, the NWMO’s spokesperson, said the organization is sticking with its timeline for a site choice. “Our plan was...
B.C.’s ‘war in the woods’ battlegrounds to be permanently protected
The Canadian Press Old rowth forests that were environmental and Indigenous rights battlegrounds over clearcut logging in the 1980s and 1990s during British Columbia’s “war in the woods” are set to receive permanent protections in a land and forest management agreement. The B.C. government says an agreement Tuesday with two Vancouver Island First Nations will protect about 760 square kilometres of Crown land in Clayoquot Sound by establishing 10 new conservancies in areas that include old-growth forests and unique ecosystems. The partnership involves reconfiguring the tree farm licence in the Clayoquot Sound area to protect the old-growth zones while supporting other forest industry tenures held by area First Nations, said Forests Minister Bruce Ralston in a statement. Statements from the Clayoquot Sound’s Ahoushat and Tla-o-qui-aht First Nations say the conservancies...
Body of second missing cousin found in Dawson Creek, B.C.
The Canadian Press Mounties in Dawson Creek, B.C., say they have identified human remains discovered in April as belonging to Darylyn Supernant, who was among four people to vanish from the area since she went missing in March 2023. Dawson Creek RCMP say DNA from the remains found on April 19 were compared with Supernant’s parents, confirming the identity. Police say the investigation into Supernant’s disappearance and death “remains active.” Dawson Creek Mounties announced last month that another body found along the Kiskatinaw River had been identified as belonging to Renee Didier, who was Supernant’s cousin. Didier went missing in December, and her remains were discovered on May 18, with Dawson Creek police identifying her 10 days later. Didier and Supernant’s uncle, Walter Mineault, a vice-president with the Métis Nation...
A byelection to watch: What the Toronto-St. Paul’s vote means for Justin Trudeau
By Sam Routley The Conversation Residents of the federal riding of Toronto-St. Paul’s will soon be tasked with voting for their next Member of Parliament. Under conventional circumstances, this wouldn’t be very interesting. The riding, occupying a sizable section of midtown Toronto, has been a Liberal stronghold for the last several decades. Former cabinet minister Carolyn Bennett, who represented the area from 1997 until early this year, regularly won the seat by at least 25 percentage points. Even in 2011, an otherwise devastating year for the Liberals, she won by just over eight points. But things seem different this time. Although the Liberals remain ahead, recent polls show it’s a uniquely slim lead. Instead, the Conservatives — despite winning only 21 per cent of the vote in Toronto-St. Paul’s in...
Convicted Murderer Robert Pickton Dies In Prison But Questions Remain
By Terry Lusty Local Journalism Initiative Reporter One of Canada’s most notorious serial killers is gone. Permanently! On May 31st, the 74-year-old ‘pig farmer’ Robert Pickton died while in a coma at a Quebec hospital after he was violently assaulted by a fellow inmate in the maximum-security Port-Cartier Institution, approximately 280 Km northeast of Quebec City. The villain from Port Coquitlam, B.C. was charged with murdering at least 26 women, mostly of Indigenous ancestry, on his huge multi-million-dollar pig farm where he and his brother often hosted huge booze and drug-infested parties attended by at-risk, vulnerable women from Vancouver’s Eastside drag area. Apparently, the unsuspecting victims were often picked up along the drag after the bars closed, then invited, lured or coerced to accompany Pickton and his friends to the...
Brantford Police seek ATV driver who collided with police cruiser
BRANTFORD, ONT- Brantford Police are seeking the driver of an ATV who collided with a police cruiser and then fled on foot. Brantford Police Service (BPS) said the incident occurred Monday, June 17, 2024, at about 9:45 p.m., when A BPS officer patrolling the area of Market Street South and Erie Avenue saw an ATV and two dirt bikes travelling in a dangerous manner. The officer attempted to stop the vehicles when the dirt bikes fled the scene but the ATV driver collided his vehicle with the police cruiser in the roadway near Erie Avenue and Clarence Street. The ATV driver left his vehicle, fleeing the area on foot southbound behind the forested area at Clarence Street and Erie Avenue. The police cruiser sustained moderate damage and the police officer sustained...
Business backer undergoes refresh
By Sandi Krasowski Local Journalism Initiative Reporter The Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business has undergone a rebranding, introduction of new sub-brands, and name change to the Canadian Council for Indigenous Business (CCIB). Denise Pothier, the council’s chief operating officer, said the changes were timely as the organization celebrates its 40th anniversary. “When we reached this anniversary milestone, it gave us pause for a reflection on the incredible foundation that has been built in the 40 years of work that came before us, and then turning our sights to the future,” Pothier said. “It seemed like a nice point to be looking at making sure we are staying relevant for our communities while having a little bit of a rebirth. We’re looking towards the future and where the growth will take...
Cohere co-founder ‘skeptical’ of AI creating sci-fi doomsday scenarios
The Canadian Press The head of Canadian artificial intelligence darling Cohere says the technology is not bound to exceed human capabilities any time soon and if it does, he’s skeptical any sci-fi like scenarios will arise. The prediction from Aidan Gomez came Tuesday at the Collision tech conference in Toronto, where the Cohere co-founder and chief executive spoke of how AI models are on track to become smarter and even more capable. However, he feels those advances have led to a “philosophical” divide among the industry, which has been rife with debate about where the technology is headed — and how fast. “I’m of the opinion that it’s going to take us a while to exceed human capabilities uniformly,” Gomez said. The more gains the technology makes, the more likely...
4 First Nations sign deal with Ontario to build roads near Ring of Fire
The Canadian Press Four First Nations have signed a deal with Ontario for new roads, other infrastructure projects and skills training as the province lays a foundation for plans to mine the mineral-rich Ring of Fire region. The province said Animbiigoo Zaagi’igan Anishinaabek, Aroland First Nation, Ginoogaming First Nation and Long Lake #58 First Nation will see their roads that connect to the provincial highway system fortified and renewed. The roads, about 300 kilometres east of Thunder Bay, Ont., will support critical mineral and resource development, Premier Doug Ford said. “These are all-season roads that will support First Nations communities, built by First Nations workers,” Ford wrote in a statement on Tuesday. The province signed letters of confirmation with Kenogamisis Investment Corporation,and Minodahmun Development, the former owned by those four...
Future Poilievre government would maintain support for ‘anti-scab’ law, office says
The Canadian Press A future Conservative government would continue to support a ban on the use of replacement workers at federally regulated workplaces during a strike, leader Pierre Poilievre’s office said Tuesday. The legislation, which is on its way to becoming law after passing in the Senate late on Monday, was a key element of the Liberals’ political pact with the New Democrats. It earned unanimous support in the House of Commons after Poilievre’s Conservatives decided to back it. Poilievre has been pitching his party as the one for the working class, despite leaders of organized labour taking aim at his record in Parliament. They point out that he supported back-to-work legislation the last time the Conservatives were in power and at one point advocated for employees to be allowed...
Anonymous group renews push for justice in Kanesatake
By Marcus Bankuti Local Journalism Initiative Reporter KANESATAKE-About a year after a media campaign that turned the country’s attention to the government’s failures to act on G&R Recycling and a climate of lawlessness and fear in the community, a group of anonymous Kanehsata’kehró:non have released a new open letter to highlight the continued urgency of their cause. “The federal government and provincial government are treating the issue like a hot potato,” said Pink, a pseudonym used by a member of the group, in an interview with The Eastern Door. “I think it serves the government to say we’ll put it on the Mohawks, yet they are not willing to apply any kind of environmental laws that would protect the community, that would protect our safety. I think the situation has...
Treaty 3 crisis has become a state of emergency: Grand Council
By Mike Stimpson Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 17/06/2024 18:45 KENORA – Last year, Grand Council Treaty #3’s fall assembly declared a mental health and substance use crisis across their territory. Now its Grand Chief and Chiefs-in-Assembly have declared a nationwide mental health and addictions state of emergency. First Nations in the Treaty #3 region have “witnessed a distressing increase in suicides and other mental health challenges over recent years, necessitating urgent and collective action,” a news release from Grand Council stated. The release said “a unified and holistic approach” that includes “crisis intervention and comprehensive community support” is needed. Grand Chief Francis Kavanaugh identified “the legacy of colonization and continued oppression, intergenerational trauma, health inequity and systemic discrimination experienced by many First Nations people and communities” as factors behind the...
B.C.’s first park expansion in a decade protects caribou
CHETWYND, B.C. —- The first provincial park expansion in a decade will see some 200,000 hectares of protected space for Caribou and other species located in northeastern B.C. The Ministry of the Environment said in a statement on June 14th that the Klinse-za Park, located southwest of Chetwynd, is part of the province’s goal of protecting 30 per cent of B.C. lands by the year 2030. Expanding the park is part of a deal reached in 2020 between the province, the federal government, Saulteau First Nations, and West Moberly First Nations. That agreement included helping to protect and stabilize the population of Caribou. In the past century, the population of Caribou declined by 55 per cent, leaving only about 4,000 southern mountain caribou in B.C., according to the province. The...
New nurses take custom Anishinaabe pledge
By Mike Stimpson Local Journalism Initiative Reporter FORT FRANCES – Some things about Florence Nightingale weren’t so great, so the nurses’ pledge named after the 19th-century caregiver was problematic. That, in a nutshell, is the explanation for the Seven Generations Education Institute (SGEI) replacing the Nightingale Pledge with a pledge tailored to its Indigenous nursing grads. The pledge this year’s new crop of SGEI-trained nurses took at a pinning ceremony in Fort Frances was drafted to reflect Anishinaabe culture. “The need for the custom pledge was identified by our post-secondary director, Angela Mainville,” Jana-Rae Yerxa, curriculum developer for SGEI, told NWO Newswatch. “It was unsettling that our nursing graduates were reciting the Florence Nightingale Pledge. “Although Nightingale is a celebrated figure in the nursing profession, the reality is that she...