Thank you, Mr. Chair, as well as members of the standing committee, for this opportunity.
My name is John Thunder. I am the chief of the Buffalo Point First Nation, located in Manitoba on the beautiful shores of Lake of the Woods, just across the border from the United States.
I am 52 years old. The first time I proxied for my father was when I was 18 years old at the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs meetings. I have known the likes of Walter Dieter, Robert Conley, and Brian Vino. I even have a picture of Jean Chrétien wearing a headdress and trying to implement the 1969 white paper. Between my father and me, we have led the way for first nations in lands and economic development. We have basically written a book on it, and this is what I present to you today. I have a few books that you can help yourselves to in order to read our story.
What has been transpiring since my dad, both financially and personally, started 35 years ago to build a modern resort community, a world-class tourist destination, is that today we have a total investment of about $50 million in infrastructure and community development that surpasses most communities in Canada. We have a deficit of a mere $3 million. We have literally graduated from the Indian Act and no longer need these impediments that are placed in front of us. It is my goal and priority to host a contribution-burning ceremony in 2015 to finally sever the ties with the department of dependency.
Beyond the need to have our land code passed, and without the siege and takeover and sabotage in our communities' referendum, we more importantly want to have the total economic impact that we have created on our land. This peninsula is generating four times the revenue in taxes and natural resources. That is what our government should have for ourselves, rather than those moneys being pocketed by other governments. This is what will ultimately allow us to get out of the dependency that has been created for first nations.
There are literally billions and billions of dollars every single day that run right through both our front yard as well as our back door. Our lake is a hydro reservoir for electricity and, of course, the city of Winnipeg's drinking water. There are two transmission lines, and a natural gas pipeline runs six miles from my community, all exporting into the United States with not a penny of those revenues benefiting my community. The Canadian National Railway cuts off our community for a total of four hours every single day, yet they pay taxes to the Rural Municipality of Piney while that railroad line runs right through our community. The property taxes from this business belong to the first nation and not some other government.
I heard a good line from Paul Fauteux today, who did this study on 25 successful first nations: “I stole it fair and square.” I thought that was a pretty good analogy. It is this injustice that I have been trying to correct, but with little to no success.
We have been identified as one of the healthiest and fastest-growing communities in Manitoba, and that includes the non-aboriginal communities as well. To continue to go through processes that take a minimum of five years to accomplish is nothing short of economic suicide. Then to allow economic terrorists to sabotage all of our hard work will set us back as first nations another 30 years. Having a community vote on whether a business gets to be built on our land is insane, to say the least. The time for extracting the Indian Act from our lives to allow first nations to move forward based on their own merits is long overdue.
It is interesting that in our treaty land entitlement process, a second vote of the simple majority was incorporated into our referendum process so that we were guaranteed a favourable outcome. This might sound somewhat contradictory, but one must understand that a lot of our people lack the trust and the education to make an informed decision that ultimately is handed down to us by the Indian affairs department. It would only make sense to have all this made available with the lands management program.
I would also like to question why the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development has watered down this study on the successes of first nations and why the recommendations are being ignored and whitewashed. I had to post this study on my blog so I could create an opportunity for other first nations to have access to this document, because no one in the federal government was willing to move this forward.
As the chiefs in 1910 said to Wilfred Laurier, they say that they have authority over us and claim this country as their own, using their courts to regulate and control us. That was 102 years ago, and still we live with this hanging over our heads to this very day.
In closing, let me say that without the authority to implement the financial as well as the judicial side of government, we might as well be denying the future of Canada and the first nations of this country. We should be assets, not liabilities. We can help protect our country from exploitation and start adding value to our resources, rather than continuing to wholesale them. We should sit as equals with the rest of society in Canada.
If we play our cards right, we can become economic powerhouses by using our land and resources to the benefit of all of our people. We can protect the environment by reinvesting these moneys where they belong. This is what I consider a sustainable and long-term strategy for becoming a community for the future.
Meegwetch, and thank you.