Attawapiskat seeks injunction against 
third-party manager
By Crawford 
Kilian January 28, 2012 05:35 pm 1 
comments 
http://thetyee.ca/Blogs/TheHook/Rights-Justice/2012/01/28/Attawapiskar_seeks_injunction/
The Attawapiskat First Nation has filed a request for an injunction removing 
the third-party manager imposed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, while Chief 
Theresa Spence has also signed an affidavit comparing the impact of the 
third-party manager to her experience in residential school.
The documents were published on the website of the 
Attawapiskat First Nation on January 26. In the motion for an interlocutory 
injunction, Attawapiskat argued:
2. The context of these proceedings is the serious and unprecedented  housing 
crisis in the First Nation. Many members of the First Nation are now  living in 
overcrowded, unsafe conditions, in uninsulated, unserviced  dwellings. Some of 
these dwellings are mere tents and shacks. Others are  once-usable premises 
that, because of poor construction and chronic  underfunding, are now 
mold-infested and unfit for habitation. As a result of  the deterioration of 
conditions and the onset of winter, a state of emergency  was declared by Grand 
Chief Stan Louttit of the Mushkegowuk Council in late  October, 2011.
>3. After numerous attempts by the First Nation at dialogue with AANDC  
>officials, and increasing media attention and questioning in the House of  
>Commons, on November 30, 2011, AANDC advised the First Nation that a  
>Third-Party Manager was being appointed. No prior consultations or attempt by  
>AANDC to implement the First Nation's remediation proposals preceded this  
>unilateral decision.
>4. Ultimately, the Application seeks a declaration that the Minister  
>appointed a Third-Party Manager for irrelevant and extraneous reasons, and not 
> for reasons authorized by the Indian Act; by the CFA; or by AANDC's own  
>published policies on Third-Party Management. On this motion, the Applicant  
>need only show (a) that there is a serious issue to be tried in this regard;  
>(b) that irreparable harm will be caused to the First Nation in the absence of 
> the requested order; and (c) that the balance of convenience favours the  
>restoration of the status quo, rather than the imposition of the extraordinary 
> intrusion of Third-Party Management of the First Nation's affairs.
>5. On the first issue, the record discloses an ample basis to find a  "serious 
>issue". There is no record of any effort to consider alternatives to  
>Third-Party Management. Nor is there any basis to conclude that mismanagement  
>or inappropriate use of funds by the Applicant required such intervention. The 
> context of events strongly suggests that Third-Party Management was imposed  
>unreasonably, and/or for collateral or extraneous purposes during a period of  
>intense public scrutiny of the Respondents' role in contributing to the state  
>of emergency suffered by the Applicant.
>6. There is inherent irreparable harm in imposing a Third-Party Manager.  Such 
>a step seizes control of a substantial proportion of the authority of  Chief 
>and Council – the lawful elected government of the people of  Attawapiskat. 
>Imposition of Third- Party Manager will constitute a lasting  affront to the 
>First Nation that will damage the relationship between it and  AANDC. 
>Moreover, it will impede ongoing efforts to address the housing crisis  now 
>underway while eroding the First Nation’s resources. The professional fees  of 
>the Third-Party Manager (an accountant with BDO Dunwoody) draw from the  very 
>funds available to resolve the urgent and time-sensitive housing crisis.  And 
>-- in the weeks since this appointment was made -- the Third-Party Manager  
>has failed to even appoint a project manager to set the process underway. The  
>First Nation, in the meantime, has taken active steps to organize an effective 
> response, and has plans developed and
 ready to execute -- but no capacity to  control the funds necessary to do so.
>7. Finally, the balance of convenience strongly favours the restoration of  
>the status quo. The Applicant is prepared to proceed with the plans developed  
>in co- operation with its own, highly-qualified project manager, whose time  
>has been donated by De Beers Canada Inc. There is no evidence that the  
>continued management by Chief and Council and the co-manager now in place  
>presents any tangible risk, nor is there evidence that the presence of the  
>Third-Party Manager will prevent a tangible risk. To the contrary, the  
>Third-Party Manager’s involvement will sap funds that would be better used to  
>remediate the crisis and delay implementation as he educates himself about the 
> unique challenges of managing a construction project in the far north in the  
>midst of winter.
>8. Completion of the project is time-sensitive not only because of the  
>conditions that the people of Attawapiskat continue to live in, but because of 
> the short window during which the "ice road" -- the only overland means of  
>transporting the modular housing that is to be installed -- is open each  
>winter. The Applicant asks that the interlocutory relief be granted, pending  
>the argument of the Application on April 24, 2012.
In a supplementary affidavit, Chief Theresa Spence 
wrote:
... 5. Residential schools are one of many direct and catastrophic  experiences 
that have taught the First Nation and its members that it is not  safe to 
surrender our autonomy and decision-making authority to Canada. Our  current 
housing crisis is the result of Canada's housing and construction  policies for 
our people throughout the last 4 decades. Our community's lack of  adequate 
infrastructure is also the result of Canada's policies and practices,  as is 
the lack of safe water to drink and a safe school for our children to  attend. 
...
>10. As Chief, I feel as powerless and vulnerable in the face of third  pretty 
>management as I did as a child taken to residential school. I and my  council 
>re therefore asking this Honourable Court to restrain Canada from  imposing 
>third party management on our community to deal with the present  housing 
>crisis.
While the media have rarely mentioned Attawapiskat 
in recent weeks, it continues to be discussed actively on Twitter.
Crawford Kilian is a contributing editor of The 
Tyee.
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