Manitoba lawsuit claims feds breached Treaty 2 by keeping annuity payments 'frozen in time' at $5 - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba lawsuit claims feds breached Treaty 2 by keeping annuity payments 'frozen in time' at $5

Another Manitoba First Nation is taking the federal government to court for keeping $5 annuity payments to treaty members "frozen in time" for nearly 150 years.

Lake Manitoba becomes at least 3rd First Nation in province to pursue class action in 2023 over same issue

Two hands are pictured showing off a stack of five dollar bills to the camera.
A man shows off his accumulated treaty annuity payments at The Forks last June. Another Manitoba First Nation is suing the federal government, alleging the unchanged amount of the payments promised in the 1870s breaches Treaty 2. (Prabhjot Singh Lotey/CBC)

Another Manitoba First Nation is taking the federal government to court for keeping $5 annuity payments to treaty members "frozen in time" for nearly 150 years.

Lake Manitoba First Nation and community member Ron Missyabitare seeking class-action status in a lawsuit filed on behalf of Treaty 2 communities that argues the Crown breached its "fiduciary and equitable duties" by keeping annuity paymentsfixed at $5 since Treaty 2 was signed in the 1870s.

"The Crown was required to regularly increasethe annuities to maintain the purchasing power at the level agreed to," readsthe statement of claim that was filed in Manitoba Court of King's Bench on Dec. 21, 2023.

"The annuities are an empty shell of the original treaty commitment."

The lawsuit is part of a pattern of legal challenges emerging across Canada in recent years targeting federal and provincial governments over annuity payment amounts.

At least two other Manitoba communities Fisher River First Nation in Treaty 5 and Roseau River AnishinaabeFirst Nation in Treaty 1 filed similarlawsuits in 2023 seeking class action status.

The latest suit names the Attorney General of Canadaas a defendant and accuses the Crown of the "wrongful withholding of money" andloss of investment opportunities for Treaty 2 members by failing to scale annuity payments over time with inflation.

Treaty 2 First Nations agreed in 1871 to an annuity framework that would see community members receive$3 per year. That was amended to $5 in1875. Councillors were to receive $15 and chiefs $25 per year.

The amendmentharmonized Treaty 2 agreements with those signed by Treaties 3 and 4, the lawsuit says.

The purpose of the agreement was toensure Treaty 2 members would receive an annual payment in exchange for the use and occupation of 35,700 square miles of land a space roughly the size of Nova Scotia.

'Purchasing power' stripped: lawsuit

Annuity payments were supposed to help secure "survival in the face of encroaching settlement and the host of social, economic and personal ills brought on by colonization," the lawsuit says.

Thepaymentswerealso supposed to retain the"same level of purchasing power ... to all future generations," according to the statement of claim.

"The value of money has declined precipitously as the cost of goods and services has grown, stripping away all meaningful purchasing power of the annuities," the lawsuit says.

"Over the same period of time, the value of the land claimed by Canada through Treaty 2, and the resources in that land, have grown astronomically, yielding billions of dollars in revenue for the benefit of the Crown and settlers."

Annuities now'merely symbolic'

Lake Manitoba First Nation, or Animozeebeeng, has 2,300 registered members, two-thirds of whom live on reserve about 160 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg.

RonMissyabit, 66, was born there in 1957. He spent almost two decades as a school liaison for the Manitoba Indigenous Cultural Education Centre and nearly two more decades as a director of the Indigenous relations branch with Manitoba Conservation.

In recent years, he has worked as a circle keeper for the care and protection of the natural worldand lead keeper for Treaty 2, the lawsuit says.

Missyabit has received the same $5 annuity payment throughout his life as the cost of housing, food and clothing have increased considerably.

Food prices are now roughly 50 times what they were in the 1880s and clothing has gone up 25 to 136 times what they were back then, the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit states that the Crown and treaty signatories mutually understood the annuities agreement as a "guarantee of a minimum level of material security,"but that the Crown eventually started to treat the annuities as "merely symbolic."

"The Crown was, to a large extent, responsible for this inflation, which is at least partially a product of exponentially increasing government spending," the lawsuit says.

"Having committed to a certain level of purchasing power, and then contributing to creating the inflation that destroyed purchasing power, the Crown was required to increase the annuities."

Lake Manitoba and Missyabit are seekinga range of unspecified damages for treaty members and nations.

Crown-Indigenous Relationsand Northern Affairs Canada declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Instead, spokespersonJacinthe Goulet told CBC Newsthat "honouring the treaty relationship" is a key part of reconciliation.

"We recognize that more needs to be done with regard to renewing the treaty relationship and remain open to looking at ways to advance this important work," Gouletsaid in a statement on Tuesday.