Thanks, Chair.
Good evening, everybody. I'm Chief Derek Epp of the Tzeachten First Nation, located in British Columbia. I've been chief now for eight years. I'm also the deputy chair of the First Nations Finance Authority, and I'm heavily involved in the First Nations Tax Commission's work. These institutions are what got Tzeachten to where we are today.
It's really a pleasure and an honour to participate in your study on expanding tax revenues and economic reconciliation. I love taxes. I love talking about taxes and how to expand our tax powers. Quote me. It doesn't matter. I think it's an important thing that gets any level of government, including our own, to the point where we need to be, and it really has got Tzeachten to where we need to be.
I love talking about how it's a foundation for our governments. Fortunately, for me, Manny's been doing this for 50 years, so the fact that I love taxes seems a little less weird now that he's been doing this for 50 years. He set the stage for me to be here today.
You'll understand a bit more about my tax obsession once you hear about my community, Tzeachten First Nation. We're not a big community. We don't have a massive land base. We have about 750 members and a little less than 900 acres of reserve land base.
Like many first nations in the 1990s, we really relied heavily on federal transfers to get us to where we are. We estimate that in that time, about 85% of our revenues came from federal transfers and 15% came from our own sources of revenue. In the early nineties, we worked with Manny to implement our property tax system, which is still going strong today.
At the turn of the century, we followed Manny's lead and implemented the fuel, alcohol and tobacco tax. In 2016, working with the First Nations Tax Commission, we led the design, development and implementation of the first nations property transfer tax, which has been one of our greatest sources of revenue since. In 2020, we created a licence fee for cannabis operators on our lands. Last year, we implemented our first accommodation tax.
We used all of the first nations institutional frameworks available to us. We joined the First Nations Fiscal Management Act in 2008. We used all of the services of the tax commission, the First Nations Financial Management Board and the First Nations Finance Authority. Many of you probably saw me here this week on behalf of the First Nations Finance Authority as well.
We have the most FMA laws of any community in Canada. We have more graduates from the Tulo Centre of Indigenous Economics university programs working for my nation.
We passed our land code under the framework agreement of the First Nations Land Management Act in 2006, and we have used this framework to implement our land and environment governance jurisdictions. We have used it to create more certainty for our members and investors, and to move up the speed of business. In the last 12 years, our economy has grown three times faster on average than any B.C. municipality.
In March 2020, we were the most prepared government in the face of Canada's pandemic. Our emergency plan ensured that we had reserve funds to support our members, to ensure food and health sustainability and to issue cheques to our members within one week of the announcements of the shutdowns.
We can react quickly to the changing economies. In 2021 and 2022, we reviewed and changed our land laws to adapt to the environment to ensure that we supported rental units in our community. These developments were completed in 2023 to meet the significant increase of the demand in our region. Currently, Tzeachten houses upward of 8% to 9% of Chilliwack's residents in the municipality, and we do that because we know we can.
Last year, we reversed the statistics from the 1990s. We received 15% in federal transfers, and 85% was from our own sources of revenue. We have shown what can be done by implementing our own fiscal and land jurisdictions with the support of institutions.
We need to speed up this work. Your motion to expand first nations' fiscal powers is just a start, and I fully support it. We need to have fuel, alcohol, cannabis and tobacco—also called FACT—excise taxes. We need to expand the FACT sales tax to include casino and ATM GST. We need to receive our fair share of carbon taxes. More than this, we also need to implement the first nations resource charge for first nations that have resource project opportunities.
Your motion is a first step, but we have a lot of work to do. We need to get rid of all the revenue caps on our tax revenues. The more revenues that stay with us, the better for the first nation's economy and the Canadian one. I mentioned that our community isn't big, but we do about a half a billion dollars in the local economy every year.
We need to put all these revenues into the FMA fiscal relationships so that we can determine how best to grow our economies and revenues. We need to expand the FMA and the framework agreement to support more access to long-term financing, to build better infrastructure—which we've done—to negotiate fair first nations local government service agreements, to build a modern land registry, to build more housing for our members and others, of course, and to create a system for faster additions to reserve.
My community has proven that first nations-led and first nations institution-supported jurisdictions work. I believe that our shared better future means more first nations fiscal powers, more first nations jurisdictions, more first nations institutions and more first nations economic growth.
I believe that with first nations working together and supporting each other we can achieve this. With your support for the necessary legislative changes, we can get there faster.
Thank you for your time.