Premier Bob McLeod on what landmark decision means for N.W.T. Mtis - Action News
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NorthQ&A

Premier Bob McLeod on what landmark decision means for N.W.T. Mtis

Last week, a landmark Supreme Court decision ruled that Mtis and non-status Indians are under the jurisdiction of the federal government. We spoke with Bob McLeod - the only Mtis premier in Canada - about what the decision means for the Northwest Territories.

'In the Northwest Territories, we've always treated Mtis differently,' says McLeod

N.W.T. Premier Bob McLeod in our CBC Yellowknife studios in late 2015. McLeod spoke with Trailbreaker host Loren McGinnis Thursday morning on the Supreme Court's landmark decision regarding Mtis in Canada. (Loren McGinnis/CBC)

Last week, a landmark Supreme Court of Canada decision ruled thattens of thousands of Mtis and non-status Indians are now under the jurisdiction of the federal government, ending a 17-year court battle.The decision is expected to have major effects onMtis and non-status Indians across the country, particularly when it comes to accessing federal programming and land claims.

Thursday morning on CBC Radio's The Trailbreaker, Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod the onlyMtispremier in Canada spoke with host Loren McGinnis on what the ruling could mean forthe territory, and the N.W.T.'s unique history with theMtis.

The following interview has been edited and condensed.

What does the decision mean to you, personally?

Well, I think that all Mtis are very pleased and proud of the decision. I myself knew Harry Daniels[the original complainant and prominentMtis leader, who diedin 2004]personally. And we all recognize that the Supreme Court decision is a very important one which will have implications for Mtis and non-status Indians throughout Canada.

How will this change things in the Northwest Territories?

In the Northwest Territories, we've always treated Mtis differently. I think the Northwest Territories is unique throughout Canada, because the Mtis are negotiating a land claim, we've always recognized their Aboriginal rights to hunt, and so on.The Mtis were part andparcel of the land claims that were settled in the Sahtu,and the Gwich'in, and the Tlicho.

The federal government will have to re-examine how it funds programs for the Mtis, such as Mtis health benefits, which our [territorial]government provides right now.

You mentioned that the territorial government currently covers the cost of health benefits forMtis in the territory. Is that a cost you expect will be picked up by the federal government?

I expect that when they re-examine their positions in these areas,with the Supreme Court ruling, they will determine they will have to change their programs. As well, I expect that it'll provide for greater constitutional protection for Mtis people when it comes to negotiating their land claims and so on.

How will this decision change the position that Mtis have within their land claims with the federal and territorial government?

I think it'll have very significant implications, because of the fact that we have supported the Mtis, the N.W.T. Mtis Nation, in their negotiations, that their land claim, once it's final and implemented, should be constitutionally protected.And the Government of Canada has preferred to negotiate as a contract between the Mtisand the federal government.

So we think it's going to have very important implications for those negotiations when it comes to constitutional protection, so the Mtis claim will be constitutionally protected like any other land claim that's negotiated in the Northwest Territories and Canada.

Can you explain why the Northwest Territories treats Mtis different from other provinces, and howthat came to be?

I think the fact that through the years, through the legislation that we passed, we recognized that the people have been here.

The years that we recognize are 1921 and 1953. And so those Indigenous people that were here before 1921, and re-affirmed when the Wildlife Act was changed in 1953, had specific rights, and we've always respected that.

We always felt as a government that the Mtis, which were recognized in the Constitution of Canada, had rights akin to status Indians and Inuit.We've always operated on that basis.

with files from Loren McGinnis, Marc Winkler