Matsqui First Nation receives $59M for loss of land 116 years ago - Action News
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British Columbia

Matsqui First Nation receives $59M for loss of land 116 years ago

The Matsqui First Nation will receive$59 millionunder Canada'sSpecific Claim Policyforthe historic loss of reserve landgoing back 116years.

Claim involves land removed from Matsqui reserve in 1908 by Canada to builda tramway

scenic of river and farmland
The view from Mission, B.C., south across the Fraser River, toward Matsqui. (Justin McElroy/CBC)

The Matsqui First Nation will receive$59 millionunder Canada'sSpecific Claim Policyforthe historic loss of reserve landgoing back 116years.

The claim involves acorridor of land that was removed from the Matsqui reserve in 1908 by Canada, and given to the Vancouver Power Companynow B.C. Hydro to builda tramway.

The settlement recognizes that the compensation given to Matsqui at the timewas inadequate, and that Canada breached an agreementto build and maintain rights of wayover the rail line, resulting inMatsqui land being cut off from any kind of practical use.

Matsqui Chief Alice McKaysaid the settlement is not reconciliation, rather hopefully the start of a relationship based on recognition, respect and trust.

"This settlement does not change the past, nor fix it. But it does give us hope for a brighter future, especially for our youth," she said.

"It shows us and our members that the government of Canada recognizes the harms of the past and is committed to building this relationship, and for that we are grateful."

The settlement announcement was held on Matsqui First Nation and included the federal Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations.

"This is not about compensation," saidGary Anandasangaree. "This is about ensuring what is rightfully yours which cannot be returnedis acknowledged."

Matsqui filed the claim in 2010 and began negotiating with the federal government in 2017.

The nation has about 230members, according to Stanley Morgan, member of the governing council. He said money from the settlement will be used in economic development initiatives with a portiondispersed among members.

In a separate claim filed in 2019, the nation is also seeking compensation forthe loss of nearly all of its historic Indian reservation land going back 160 years.

In 1864,Matsqui was allotted 9,600 acres of land as reserve only to have 99 per cent taken and sold to settlers, under the colonial leadership ofJoseph Trutch,who became B.C.'s first lieutenant-governor in 1871.

As chief commissioner of lands in the 1860s, Trutchled a profound reversal of Indian lands policy, ignoringexisting treaties and allowing reserves to be shrunk and sold.

A tiny sliver ofthe original reserve exists today as Matsqui Main Indian Reserve No. 2 at the north end of Abbotsford, B.C. about 64 kilometres southeast of Vancouver between Harris Road and the Fraser River.