Interior Alliance Leaders Council
Copyright © 2001 IALC
To All Customers Of Forest Products from British ColumbiaTo Whom It may Concern:
We are a political alliance of five Indigenous Nations comprised of 40 constituent communities, located in the south, central interior of what is now known as British Columbia. Our Interior Alliance Nations are known as the Southern Carrier, the St’at’imc, the Nlaka’pamux, the Secwepemc and the Okanagan.
The combined Aboriginal title territories of the Interior Alliance Nations cover almost one third of the present day Province of British Columbia and beyond. Our five Indigenous Nations have never ceded or surrendered our respective Aboriginal title and rights to Great Britain, Canada, the United States, British Columbia or Alberta.
By way of this letter, we are asking that you do not purchase forest products from British Columbia, because 1.) They are stolen goods; and 2.) B.C. Forest Practices are unsustainable.
We are asking you to support us:
1.) By purchasing forest products only from companies that can show they have Aboriginal consent for their forestry operations; and
2.) That their operations are ecologically sound and sustainable; and
3.) By writing the Prime Minister of Canada and the Premier of British Columbia, to protest the destructive logging taking place in the British Columbia Interior; andBackground:
The following initiatives were taken by the Government of British Columbia in the early 1990's without our involvement or consent:
Protected Areas Strategy.
Land Use Planning Processes (ie. Commission on Resources & Environment, Land & Resource Management Plans’s).
Forest Practices Code.
Forest Renewal B.C.
B.C. Treaty Process.Our Interior Alliance Nations never consented to the B.C. Claims Task Force created on December 3, 1990, or the subsequent B.C. Treaty Process, which is based upon the 1986 Federal Comprehensive Claims Policy, and there was never any meaningful consultation with our Interior Alliance Nations regarding the other four initiatives mentioned above, the provincial initiatives were simply dictates from the provincial capital.
The provincial land and forest initiatives of the 1990's, placed government Ministries and Third Party interests in front of the constitutionally protected, Aboriginal title, rights and interests of Aboriginal Nations, particularly those Aboriginal Nations and communities that refused to negotiate ownership of, and access to, natural resources, through the B.C. Treaty Process.
Aboriginal Nations and peoples are treated merely as “stakeholders” in the provincial land and forest initiatives, ignoring their unique, priority, constitutionally protected status.
As mentioned above, the establishment of the Forest Practices Code and Forest Renewal B.C. (FRBC) were done without meaningful consultation with Aboriginal Nations. The Code does not recognize or respect Aboriginal land use activities, let alone Aboriginal title. Moreover, FRBC has now redirected most of its monies back to the forestry companies through multi-year agreements, while eliminating funding for important cultural inventories such as the “Traditional Use Studies” by Aboriginal peoples.
There has never been a Treaty between Aboriginal Nations and the Crown in the south central interior of B.C. (Roughly one third of the province), this area is therefore subject to the collective Aboriginal title, rights and interests of the Interior Alliance Nations.
On December 11, 1997, the Supreme Court of Canada issued a landmark ruling known as the Delgamuukw decision. For the first time in the history of Canada, the judicial branch of the federal government confirmed that Aboriginal title exists in Canada and that it is a unique, collective, property interest in the land itself.
Despite the Supreme Court of Canada’s Delgamuukw ruling, which judicially recognizes that Aboriginal title exists in British Columbia and Canada, the executive branches of the federal and provincial governments have interpreted this court decision to mean that each Aboriginal Nation has to either enter into negotiations to extinguish their Aboriginal title and rights, or go to court and prove Aboriginal title to each and every inch of land. The governments know full well that the latter approach will cost tens of millions of dollars, which Aboriginal peoples don’t have. Consequently, we continue to receive little use and virtually no benefits from our forest resources.
In 1994, using a portion of provincial stumpage fees, the Government of British Columbia established a Crown Agency called "Forest Renewal B.C.", to direct and manage the stumpage fees "toward a new, more sustainable, productive and competitive forest economy", but again we have benefited very little from this agency, even though the stumpage fees come from timber illegally harvested from our Aboriginal title lands.
We are already experiencing an “overcut” and liquidation of our natural forests with tree farms due to commercial industrial logging practices.
The Interfor Example:
Just to provide you with one example from the B.C. Interior. My own community, the Neskonlith Indian Band, has concerns regarding Interfor’s forestry operations at the Adams Lake Mill.
Interfor has extensively logged an area to which we have submitted a legal (specific) claim to. It is our 1862 Neskonlith Douglas Reserve. The entire operating area of Interfor if also within our Aboriginal title territory.
In 1997, just before the Delgamuukw decision was handed down, the B.C. government entered into an ‘Innovative Forest Practices Agreement’ (IFPA), with Interfor. The intent of this IFPA is to allow Interfor to increase its ‘Annual Allowable Cut’, based upon ‘innovative forest practices’ such as thinning , sylviculture, etc.
As we understand it, Interfor is proceeding to announce an increase in their AAC next month. Yet we have never been meaningfully consulted regarding our traditional and contemporary activities in Interfor’s operating area, even though it is our 1862 Neskonlith Douglas Reserve, as well as, our Aboriginal title territory.
We are concerned about the forest practices allowed by government and industry on our lands, that is why we have put forward candidates to sit on the regional and national boards of the Forest Stewardship Council. For your information, we are providing you with a copy of a Legal Memorandum on FSC’s Principle #3 as it pertains to the development of regional standards in British Columbia. (See attached.)
We can understand your position regarding obtaining relatively inexpensive forest products, but when it comes from British Columbia, the price doesn’t include our proprietary interest, as Aboriginal title holders, nor does it include the environmental costs of protecting the biodiversity we need to carry out our traditional activities. We therefore, once again, urge you not to buy B.C. forest products unless they come from an Aboriginal Forestry company. Sincerely,
Chief Arthur Manuel
Neskonlith Indian Band
Chairman, Shuswap Nation Tribal Council
Chairman, Interior AllianceCC. Interior Alliance Leaders Council
Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs
Assembly of First NationsTsyucwminste r Tmicw Secwepemc Watershed Committee
Adams Lake & Neskonlith Indian Bands
Janice Billy Spokesperson
Box 608, Chase BC, Canada V0E 1M0
Phone: 250-679-3295 ~ Fax: 250-679-5306
Email: jrbilly@mail.ocis.net