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The McLeod Lake Indian Band Treaty No. 8 Adhesion and Settlement Agreement rectified this oversight. [58] Malahat First Nation: Te'mexw Treaty Association: Vancouver Island: Douglas Treaties [2] 1850-54: Renegotiating in the BC Treaty Process, presently at Stage 4 [25] Mamalilikulla-Qwe'Qwa'Sot'Em First Nation: Kwakiutl District Council ...
Treaty 8 Tribal Association (T8TA) is an association of six of the eight Peace River Country First Nations bands who are signatories to Treaty 8 in northeastern British Columbia. They have joined in an effort to negotiate with British Columbia and Canada outside the British Columbia Treaty Process .
The British Columbia Treaty Commission is the independent body which oversees the treaty process. B.C. treaty commissioners were first appointed in April 1993, and the treaty process officially began in December 1993. By 1996, 47 First Nations, representing more than 60% of status Indians in B.C., had decided to participate.
Bands can be united into larger regional groupings called tribal councils. A treaty council, or treaty association, has additional meaning and historically in most provinces represents signatory bands of treaty areas. British Columbia is an exception as treaties in most of the province have not been completed.
The Carrier-Chilcotin Tribal Council is a First Nations tribal council located in the Chilcotin District of the Central Interior of the Canadian province of British Columbia, and also on the Fraser River near the city of Quesnel. [1] It consists of three Carrier bands and one Tsilhqot'in band. [2]
British Columbia Treaty Process; ... The following is a partial list of First Nations band governments in Canada: [1] [2] [3] ... British Columbia
Students from this band and others were required by law to attend the school until it closed in the 1970s. [3] The Lower Kootenay Tribe, known as the Yaqan Nukiy is part of the Ktunaxa Nation. The Ktunaxa Nation consists of six different Bands, four located in British Columbia and two in the United States. [4]
The CSTC had claimed that, "[i]n the 1950s, the government of British Columbia authorized the building of a dam and reservoir which altered the amount and timing of water flows in the Nechako River. The First Nations claim the Nechako Valley as their ancestral homeland, and the right to fish in the Nechako River, but, pursuant to the practice ...