--- On Sat, 3/3/12, RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com> wrote:

From: RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com>
Subject: Fw: [TRA] Metro Vancouver debates touchy issue of Indian Reserve voting
To: undisclosed-recipi...@yahoo.com
Received: Saturday, March 3, 2012, 4:51 PM


 
 





FYI


 

From: Don 
Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2012 4:39 PM
To: TRA Listerve ; NatNews North 
Subject: [TRA] Metro Vancouver debates touchy issue of Indian 
Reserve voting
 


Metro Vancouver debates touchy issue of Indian Reserve voting 



 
Belcarra Mayor Ralph Drew (left) is vice-chair 
of Metro Vancouver's aboriginal affairs committee; Community, Sport and 
Cultural 
Development Minister Ida Chong (right). 
File
Buy Surrey Leader Photos Online 
By Jeff 
Nagel - Surrey North Delta Leader
Published: March 03, 2012 1:00 
PM 
Updated: March 03, 2012 1:27 PM 
http://www.surreyleader.com/news/141306743.html

Metro Vancouver directors are split over whether the regional district should 
try to block residents of Indian Reserves from voting in future civic 
elections.

Reserve residents in most cities can vote in municipal elections because the 
reserves are within city boundaries.

But that ability may have unintended consequences as local First Nations build 
market condo developments on their reserves and usher in 
thousands of new non-aboriginal residents.

Belcarra Mayor Ralph Drew, vice-chair of Metro's aboriginal affairs 
committee, said the planned Squamish Nation development in West Vancouver could 
add 30,000 residents who would not pay city taxes but would use city services 
and have a vote in civic elections.

He argues a reserve voting block that big could alter the outcome of council 
elections or referenda in smaller cities – perhaps causing the city to spend 
more on new projects without those residents having to contribute to the 
cost.

The proposed solution is for Metro cities to seek provincial government 
permission to redraw their boundaries to exclude Indian Reserves, ending the 
civic vote for their residents.

"I do not believe we can disenfranchise voters," said Lions Bay Mayor Brenda 
Broughton at a Metro board meeting Friday.

Vancouver Coun. Andrea Reimer called it distorted logic for Metro cities to 
invert the principle of no taxation without representation and insist on "no 
representation without taxation."

If it took that stance, she said, it would have to deny the vote to renters, 
people in social housing and others who don't directly pay taxes.

The real issue, Reimer said, is how aboriginal rights and title is reconciled 
in the modern world.

She said that is best done through negotiation with First Nations and success 
will depend on good relationships that could be damaged by an effort to deny 
the 
vote.

"To focus on this particular issue is unhelpful and in fact quite 
inflammatory," added Tsawwassen First Nation Chief Kim Baird, who holds a seat 
at the Metro board.

Under the terms of the TFN treaty – the only urban treaty so far in the Lower 
Mainland – residents there no longer vote in municipal elections but do have a 
vote for school board.

Baird suggested the concerns of cities over taxation and the need for reserve 
residents to contribute to civic costs can be dealt with through negotiated 
servicing agreements with the local First Nation.

Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan, chair of the regional planning committee, 
defended the committee recommendation to pursue the issue as a priority item 
for 
Metro.

"I don't think anyone should be offended that we are putting these issues on 
the table," Corrigan said. "We are not the decision makers. We just think they 
are important issues to be discussed."

Metro already raised the 
idea with the province last October after the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory 
Committee issued a discussion paper outlining local government concerns, but 
some different directors now sit at the regional table following November civic 
elections.

Community, Sport and Cultural Development Minister Ida Chong reacted 
cautiously in a Jan. 11 letter to the board.

"Disenfranchising citizens who live within local government service areas 
without their consent would be viewed by many British Columbians as 
undemocratic," Chong said.

She said the proposal would have "significant and far-reaching impacts" and 
would require full consultation with First Nations and affected citizens.

Chong indicated her ministry would consider the idea if the new Metro board 
still wants to pursue it.

No vote was taken Friday because some newly elected Metro directors said they 
were unfamiliar with the issue and wanted to study the discussion paper.

The Metro board meets again March 30.

Concerns about reserve votes are not an issue in most other provinces, which 
exclude reserves from local cities.

More than 7,000 aboriginal and non-aboriginal residents currently live on the 
22 Indian reserves within Metro Vancouver.
 




  Strip reserve 
  residents of civic vote: Metro 
  Metro Vancouver 
  chops aboriginal issues watchdog 
  Metro Vancouver 
  to adopt emission reduction targets 
  Surrey, Port 
  Moody fastest Metro Vancouver growers in new census 
  Metro Vancouver 
  waste burning strategy to take shape 
  Metro sues over 
  parkland




____________________________________________________________
Questions 
about the titleandrightsalliance list?  Contact d...@ubcic.bc.ca
TRA 
Archives http://npogroups.org/lists/arc/titleandrightsalliance
Follow 
http://twitter.com/UBCIC & 
http://twitter.com/dogwoodbc

Reply via email to