[Witness spoke in Mi'kmaq and provided the following text:]
Wela’lioq iknmuioq kis luwistun. E’m kiskuk teluisik Sipekne’katik District. Wutan Millbrook First Nation, Mi’kma’ki.
[Witness provided the following translation:]
Thank you for allowing me to speak. Today, I am in the Sipekne’katik District, the community of Millbrook First Nation, Mi’kma’ki.
[English]
I’d like to thank you for allowing me to speak to you today on barriers to indigenous economic development. I am the chief operating officer for Ulnooweg, an aboriginal financial institution serving the needs of the Atlantic indigenous community.
Ulnooweg’s inception dates back to 1985. It's one of the first aboriginal capital corporations to receive capital. Its history of 35-plus years is a testament to resilience and innovation in indigenous economic development. In its original directive, Ulnooweg was mandated to address a very broad mandate during the early years of community development: to promote the economic and social welfare of our members; to support training and education and research assistance for employment opportunities; and to provide support for benevolent and charitable enterprises and to organizations and corporations engaged in assisting the development, both economic and social, of our members.
Our first two decades of existence focused on promoting economic welfare—pigeonholed by government programming with an unfulfilled community mandate specifically to address the area defined as “developmental lending”, to this day limited on maximum lending limits by program constraints.
Ulnooweg’s path to innovation began in 2004, as it realized the unmet need for capital beyond developmental lending but below the risk tolerance of mainstream institutions.
Our chair, Chief Terrance Paul of Membertou, stated in his address to the Atlantic chiefs in 2007 that in order for us to catch up with the Canadian economy, we need access to larger amounts of capital. We need financing for our community and economic infrastructure for housing, developing our fishery and forestry resources, and for business development. At the present time, we just do not have access to the capital we need. If we do not act now to lay the foundation of our own institutions to take advantage of our collective spending power, then the benefits will continue to flow out of our communities.
Ulnooweg developed a comprehensive feasibility study to establish its own Atlantic financial institution to address this gap. The market demand study led us to continue our search for innovative ways to address the capital needs of our first nations governments in Atlantic Canada.
In 2005 the First Nations Fiscal and Statistical Management Act came into effect. It was a framework built around utilizing revenue in the form of property tax and leaseholds on reserve lands to use as security for a loan from the FNFA. The immediate problem recognized by the Atlantic first nations was their own lack of property tax and leasehold revenues. Because of our prior in-depth work on the market demand study, with over half of Atlantic first nations, we were able to support the efforts of FNFA’s case to recognize own-source revenues, inclusive of revenues from gaming, fishery and other business-related activities.
In 2007, in collaboration with the Atlantic policy congress of chiefs, the fishery business development team was created to address the development of the indigenous fishery sector in Atlantic Canada, its success leading to the creation of similar services in the Pacific and on northern coasts.
As our search to find innovative ways to address the access to capital needs continued, we became familiarized with the philanthropic sector, eventually identifying that our review and presentation of band-audited statements back to local chiefs and councillors, under what we now call our “community financial review” process, could be defined as charitable work. This led to the establishment in 2014 of the Ulnooweg Financial Education Centre, a charitable organization providing government financial literacy.
Our work also identifies the lack of infrastructure to accept philanthropic dollars, as first nations have never been automatically legislated to be recognized as organizations doing the work of public bodies or governments, as municipalities have been. Our work has continued to include supporting communities to gain their qualified donee status under our charity at no cost to the bands.
As we increase our efforts to support the growth of indigenous businesses, we also realize that we severely lack capacity in the technology space. Efforts for increasing procurement participation, for example, identify very low or non-existent capacity to bid on opportunities in this space or to participate in employment opportunities. Our path leads to establishing inroads into the innovation ecosystem to start identifying our needs, leading to a concerted effort to provide STEM education to indigenous youth P to 12, inspiring the next generation.
Building bridges with philanthropy has also led to Ulnooweg establishing its own charitable foundation, the Ulnooweg Indigenous Communities Foundation.
Its recent announcement of a $15-million, five-year grant from the Mastercard Foundation is a testament to its innovative approach to advancing indigenous economic development, not only through the lens of business and economic development, but inclusive of education, health, recreation and community development as per its original mandate.
This can also be seen in its history of institutional development, incubating critical institutions by providing financial administration services for self-governance including the establishment of the Made-in-Nova Scotia Process, which became the Kwilmu'kw Maw-klusuaqn organization involved in treaty rights implementation. Today we are not only administering the collective commercial enterprise of the first nations bands, but we're also in the development stage of supporting the creation of a Nova Scotia Mi'kmaq-owned health authority in supporting health transformation.
Ulnooweg's innovative approach has required increased financial support to the operations as it has grown from an organization of six persons to well over 65 today and still growing. The lack of operation support for capacity development as part of institutional growth is a common problem amongst indigenous communities throughout the country, as has been identified in the development of national institutions like the FNFMB as well.
Thank you.