Six Nations Farmers get $75,000 for white corn project
Six Nations approved $75,000 for the Six Nations Farmers Association’s 2026 White Corn Project following an emotional debate over new funding policies, accountability measures and the future of one of the community’s longest-running food initiatives. Six Nations Elected Council (SNEC) voted 10-2 to allocate the funding from Ontario First Nations Limited Partnership (OFNLP) funds at the General Finance Committee meeting on July 6 after Art and Jesse Porter from the Six Nations Farmers Association raised concerns that delays in the approval process left them planting this year’s crop without knowing whether financial support would be available. The discussion highlighted growing tensions between council’s push for stronger financial accountability and concerns that new funding requirements are being applied to long-standing community programs that have operated for decades. Art Porter told SNEC...
Artist Corrie Hill Hopes to Inspire the Next Generation of Six Nations Artists With Indigenous GO Bus Design
By Alex Murray Writer It was near the shores of Lake Erie at the now-closed Ridgeway-Crystal Beach High School that Six Nations artist Corrie Hill discovered her love of art. Hill, who was tapped by Metrolinx to do their National Indigenous History Month (NIHM) GO Bus wraparound design this year, always knew she wanted to create “beautiful things.” She just didn’t know what exactly those things would be. It was only when she connected her Haudenosaunee heritage with her love of art that she finally “put two and two together.” “As I got older, I kind of made the choice to start my healing journey, start feeling my mental wellness and kind of rebuild that connection to my Haudenosaunee heritage and that’s kind of where I put two and two...
Editorial: Six Nations sovereignty versus Ontario
There’s nothing complicated about what Ontario’s Ministry of Finance (MOF) does. For First Nations communities it’s clear. It enforces the Tobacco Tax Act. It sends the Ontario Provincial Police to hide in plain sight around First Nation communities to arrest unsuspecting consumers of egregious behaviour! The behaviour? Along with buying a local craft they dared to buy a tobacco product in a First Nation community. Their crime! They didn’t pay taxes. The reason for the push? Politics. Off reserve convenience stores (voters) complain the sale of their tobacco products has fallen due to sales in First Nation communities. Not a fact they’ve actually been able to prove since tobacco sales began falling for various health reasons years ago. The real reason. Ontario doesn’t like not collecting the taxes. So now,...
Kashechewan: Ottawa “dragging their feet” as First Nations faces evacuations
By Alex Murray Writer NIAGARA FALLS, ONT- For Kashechewan First Nation it’s been six months…and counting. The First Nation has been evacuated at least once in each of the last 18 years, but the latest now means they are being separated from their land for six months. It’s the longest evacuation Tyson Wesley can remember. “It’s not the situation that we would like to be in. I think our people ultimately want to just be home,” Wesley, Kashechewan’s Executive Director, told Turtle Island News. “It’s not a vacation for us when we’re in Niagara Falls. It’s not a six-month vacation where we’re in a hotel.” A state of emergency was declared by the First Nation on January 3, 2026, when cryptosporidium was found to be infecting the water supply. Most...
Rivermen finish atop OSL standings and receive bye for first playoff round
By Sam Laskaris Writer The Six Nations Rivermen had a major victory on Sunday despite not even playing a game themselves. The Rivermen concluded their own regular season on Saturday with a convincing 17-10 win over the host Collingwood Cruise. The local Six Nations club ended up with a 10-2 record in the regular season standings of the seven-team Ontario Series Lacrosse (OSL). The Rivermen then found out on Sunday night that they would be awarded top spot in the league standings when the Hamilton Bengals upset the Brooklin Merchants 10-5. Like the Six Nations squad, the Whitby-based Merchants also ended up with a 10-2 mark. But the Rivermen were awarded first places because one of their losses was in overtime. Both the Rivermen and Merchants receive opening-round playoff byes....
Warriors advance to Can-Am semi-finals after sweeping Redhawks
By Sam Laskaris Writer Following an opening-round playoff sweep, the Grand River Warriors are now gearing up for their next post-season series. But the local Senior B men’s lacrosse squad will have a formidable task in its upcoming games. That’s because the Six Nations-based Warriors will be squaring off against the top-ranked Newton Golden Eagles in a best-of-five Can-Am Lacrosse League semi-final series, which begins Friday. The Warriors, who had placed fourth in the six-team Can-Am circuit with a 10-10 regular season record, defeated the Onondaga Redhawks 2-0 in their best-of-three, opening-round post-season series. The Warriors, who play their home contests at the Brantford Civic Centre, downed the Redhawks 16-10 in the series opener last Thursday. The Grand River squad also captured Game 2, on the road, with a 12-8...
Hill named MVP of provincial Senior B lacrosse circuit for second straight year
By Sam Laskaris Writer For the second straight year Six Nations Rivermen offensive star Thunder Hill has been selected as the most valuable player of the Ontario Series Lacrosse (OSL). This year’s OSL award winners were announced on Sunday night, the last day of the league’s regular season schedule. Hill was the only Six Nations player to win a league-wide award this year. And he also captured the league’s top scorer award. Hill played in 11 of the 12 Rivermen regular season matches and racked up 56 points, including 22 goals. He was the only player in the seven-team OSL to average more than five points per game. A year ago Hill had earned 75 points (41 goals and 34 assists) in 16 regular season matches. League officials decided to...
First Nations chiefs gather in Ottawa for second day of AFN general assembly
By Alessia Passafiume First Nations leaders attending the Assembly of First Nations annual general meeting in Ottawa today are expected to debate the terms of an upcoming meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney and the premiers and territorial leaders. In her opening remarks to the gathering Tuesday, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak said a planned meeting this fall between first ministers and chiefs from across the country was hard to secure and must not be the last of its kind. Woodhouse Nepinak told chiefs the Prime Minister’s Office has confirmed the meeting will take place in October. Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty is also expected to attend the Assembly of First Nations gathering to talk about the federal housing and infrastructure strategy. The Assembly of First...
Chiefs tell AFN meeting new federal clean water bill walks back hard-won rights
By Alessia Passafiume First Nations leaders and two opposition MPs are denouncing the Carney government’s new proposed clean water legislation, which drops wording in a previous version that would have explicitly recognized First Nations’ right to clean drinking water. Speaking on a panel at the Assembly of First Nations annual general assembly in Ottawa, NDP MP Leah Gazan and Conservative MP Billy Morin picked the bill apart alongside Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Linda Debassige and Newfoundland Regional Chief Brendan Mitchell. Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty reintroduced legislation this summer that seeks to ensure First Nations have reliable access to clean drinking water in their communities. While the legislation is largely in line with a bill that failed to pass under the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, it leaves...
Assets of Alberta separatist leader frozen in dispute with FirstNation
By Lisa Johnson An Alberta court has temporarily frozen up to $8.5 million in assets held by one of the province’s most recognizable separatist leaders. Justice Michael Marion granted an interim injunction last week preventing Jeffrey Rath and his law firm from transferring the assets until a Wednesday hearing. It’s part of an ongoing legal battle between the Tallcree First Nation and Rath, the First Nation’s former lawyer, over control of a multimillion-dollar trust fund established in 2017. Chief Rupert Meneen alleges in a legal brief that Rath misappropriated approximately $6.4 million from the trust in excessive and improper fees. Justice Marion says in the order that there are reasonable grounds to believe the assets would be “dissipated or removed” before the case is decided in court. In a June...
La Ronge area fire ban takes effect amid wildfire, smoke concerns
By Nicole Goldsworthy, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, SaskToday.ca, SASKTODAY.ca LA RONGE — Residents across the La Ronge area are being urged to avoid all open fires after the Lac La Ronge Indian Band (LLRIB) and La Ronge Emergency Management imposed a local fire ban amid extreme wildfire conditions and deteriorating air quality. The fire ban took effect at noon Tuesday, July 14, and applies to the LLRIB communities of Sucker River, Stanley Mission, Grandmother’s Bay, Hall Lake, Kitsaki Reserve 156 and 156B, and Little Red. The ban will remain in place until significant precipitation is received. All open fires are prohibited under the order. However, traditional smokers, propane barbecues, propane-fuelled fire pits and briquettes are still permitted. Existing burn permits have been suspended until the ban is lifted. The LLRIB...
Assembly of First Nations passes Residential School Denialism resolution on opening day
By Alex Murray Writer The Assembly of First Nations (AFN) passed an emergency resolution on the first day of their Annual General Assembly in Ottawa on Tuesday aimed at curbing the rising tide of Residential School denialism in Canada. Pimicikamak Chief David Monias, who was the mover on the resolution, said the resolution calls on Canada to work with First Nations to address residential school denialism, educate the public, and protect sacred burial and memorial sites. “When people deny or minimize this history, they do more than deny the past, they reopen the wounds of survivors, they dishonor the children, they fuel anti-First Nations racism. Reconciliation cannot exist if truth is questioned or erased,” Monias said. The resolution, which was carried by consensus, specifically calls for an amendment to the...
As disasters worsen, Indigenous peoples threatened by a ‘crisis communication gap’
By Dionne Phillips, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, IndigiNews This story is published through the Indigenous News Alliance. In April, after an out-of-control wildfire threatened the remote Xeni Gwet’in First Nation in “B.C.,” local governments issued evacuation alerts. The fire quickly spread to 250 hectares, before being extinguished a few days later, and the evacuation alert was rescinded. Although Xeni Gwet’in’s nearly 500 residents were relieved, the crisis was a reminder of what many Indigenous leaders say is governments’ inadequate emergency communications with Indigenous communities. Authorities do not provide alerts in the Tŝilhqot’in language, the only one spoken by many Elders in Xeni Gwet’in, and the mother tongue of nearly 650 people in the larger Tŝilhqot’in Nation. This adds an additional layer of difficulty during disasters because many families look toward...
LNG Canada equity option agreement with five FirstNations
LNG Canada has reached an agreement with five neighbouring First Nations in northern B.C. that would provide them an option to invest up to $1-billion in the project’s proposed second phase. The equity option agreement is with MNT Investments LP, which includes development organizations from the Gitga’at, Gitxaała, Haisla, Kitselas and Kitsumkalum. MNT would be able to buy a majority stake in a special-purpose entity that would in turn buy a storage tank to be built as part of LNG Canada’s second phase. The tank would then be leased back to LNG Canada for as long as the project in Kitimat, B.C., operates. LNG Canada, led by Shell Canada alongside four Asian companies, aims to make a final investment decision by year-end on an expansion project that would double the...
Assets of Alberta separatist leader frozen in dispute with FirstNation
By Lisa Johnson An Alberta court has temporarily frozen up to $8.5 million in assets held by one of the province’s most recognizable separatist leaders. Justice Michael Marion granted an interim injunction last week preventing Jeffrey Rath and his law firm from transferring the assets until a Wednesday hearing. It’s part of an ongoing legal battle between the Tallcree First Nation and Rath, the First Nation’s former lawyer, over control of a multimillion-dollar trust fund established in 2017. Tallcree Chief Rupert Meneen alleges in a legal brief that there’s evidence Rath misappropriated about $6.4 million from the trust “in excessive and improperly taken fees which he concealed from the Nation and its beneficiaries.” “The nation does not know where the funds are currently located,” says the application, filed June 24....
Whitesand First Nation members in city after sudden evacuation
By Mike Stimpson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, SNnewswatch.com THUNDER BAY — Whitesand First Nation’s Steve Gustafson didn’t have much time on Monday night to prepare for his trip to the city. “Earlier in the day I saw nothing but smoke, cloudy and everything until about 6 o’clock in the evening we seen a posting from chief and council about getting ready to evacuate,” Gustafson told Newswatch Tuesday morning. He said officials with the First Nation, near Armstrong, told members they would need ID, clothes and medicine. “And then all of a sudden, 10:30 in the evening, that’s when I seen that (evacuation) posting.” While some came to Thunder Bay by bus, Gustafson gassed up his own vehicle in Armstrong and drove with family to the city. “I just grabbed some...
B.C. warned of ‘significant wildfire event’ in coming days, as lightning raises risks
By Ashley Joannou Wildfire officials and crews across British Columbia were preparing for a potentially significant uptick in fire activity in the coming days as dry conditions collide with expected lightning, particularly in the southern two-thirds of the province. The director of wildfire operations for the BC Wildfire Service, Cliff Chapman, told a news conference on Tuesday that fuels on the landscape were “as dry as they can get,” making much of the province “highly susceptible” to wildfires. At the same time, there was potential for “dry” lightning over the next 48 hours, particularly in southern parts of B.C. near the United States border. “What dry lightning means is that we will see high winds, lightning hitting the ground, and it will come with very little or no precipitation leading...
Residents in parts of northern Ontario ordered out because of growing forest fires
By Maan Alhmidi Residents of a handful of communities in northwestern Ontario have been ordered to leave their homes due to nearby forest fires. Ontario Provincial Police said on social media that evacuation orders are in place for Armstrong, Lac La Croix First Nation, Collins First Nation, Whitesand First Nation and Lac des Mille Lacs First Nation. These communities are under mandatory evacuation orders and parts of several highways in the area are closed, police said. Highway 11 — between Highway 633 and Highway 623 — has since reopened. The fire is also threatening other communities in the area, including Rainy River District and Kiashke Zaaging Anishinaabek, also known as Gull Bay First Nation. OPP confirmed it would help Gull Bay First Nation with a mandatory evacuation. “Individuals living in...
Residents in parts of northern Ontario ordered out because of growing forest fires
By Maan Alhmidi Residents of a handful of communities in northwestern Ontario have been ordered to leave their homes due to nearby forest fires. Ontario Provincial Police said on social media that evacuation orders are in place for Armstrong, Lac La Croix First Nation, Collins First Nation, Whitesand First Nation and Lac des Mille Lacs First Nation. These communities are under mandatory evacuation orders and parts of several highways in the area are closed, police said. The fire is also threatening other communities in the area including Rainy River District and Gull Bay First Nation. The OPP said those in Ignace, Crystal Lake and the Highway 633 area should prepare for possible evacuations. Officials at Wabakimi Provincial Park said it will be closed until July 20 due to the extreme...
Chiefs tell AFN meeting new federal clean water bill walks back hard-won rights
By Alessia Passafiume First Nations leaders and an opposition MP are denouncing the Carney government’s new proposed clean water legislation, which drops wording in a previous version that would have explicitly recognized First Nations’ right to clean drinking water. Speaking on a panel at the Assembly of First Nations annual general assembly in Ottawa, NDP MP Leah Gazan and Conservative MP Billy Morin picked the bill apart alongside Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Linda Debassige and Newfoundland Regional Chief Brendan Mitchell. Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty reintroduced legislation this summer that seeks to ensure First Nations have reliable access to clean drinking water in their communities. While the legislation is largely in line with a bill that failed to pass under the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, it leaves...









