NCC to vote on new SJAM name after selecting Algonquin recommendation - Action News
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Ottawa

NCC to vote on new SJAM name after selecting Algonquin recommendation

Algonquin communities consulted over what to rename Ottawa'sSir John A. Macdonald Parkway have reached a consensus and the new name will be recommended to the National Capital Commission's board of directors later this month, according to a letter sent to a chief.

Unveiling could happen this fall if board approves renaming later this month

Someone walks a dog on a multi-use path beside an empty road.
Indigenous groups consulted over what to rename the Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway have chosen the name Kichi Zb Mkan, according to a National Capital Commission letter. Mkan is an Algonquin wordmeaning road or path. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Algonquin communities consulted over what to rename Ottawa'sSir John A. Macdonald Parkway have reached a consensus and the new nameKichi Zb Mkan will be recommended to the National Capital Commission's board of directors later this month, according to a letter circulated by one of the Indigenous groups involved.

In a June 7 letter addressedtoKitiganZibi AnishinbegChief Dylan Whiteduck, commissionCEOTobiNussbaumsaid an unveiling ceremony will be planned for this fall if the board approves the name at its next meeting on June 22.

The letter was included inKitiganZibi Anishinbeg's weeeklynewsletter.

"Iwas informed by my team that [groups] reached a consensus for a new name: Kichi Zb Mkan," Nussbaum stated in the letter. It said the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan First Nationwere also consulted about the new name and a letter sent to its chief.

Mkan, pronounced MEE-khan,isan Algonquin wordmeaning road or path.Kichi Zb means great river and is the Algonquin name for what would later be called the Ottawa River.

An NCC spokesperson said Friday thefederal Crown corporation, which oversees the parkway, is expecting to finalize the renaming at the board meeting June 22.

A First Nations chief poses in front of an Indigenous veterans memorial.
KitiganZibi AnishinbegChief Dylan Whiteduck poses in front of the National Aboriginal Veterans Monument in Ottawa's Confederation Park on June 9, 2023. (Stu Mills/CBC)

In an interview Friday in Ottawa, Whiteducksaid the proposed changeis not just a necessary step toward reconciliation but a more contextually appropriate name.

"Our people literally walked under and met Samuel De Champlain under the Rideau Falls," Whiteducksaid. "So you could imagine the context of that great river. It's a significant river for the Algonquins, many Canadians.

"Driving on [the parkway], itdoesn't add any value to have it named Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway."

Local councillors had urged change

The parkway has carried the first prime minister's name for over a decade.

The Ottawa River Parkway was renamed in his honour in 2012, under the government of former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper.

Whiteduck said Indigenous groups called for the name to be changed as early as2014.

In June 2021, three Ottawa city councillors sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urging the federal government to facilitate an Indigenous-led consultation process to rename the parkway.

The councillorswrote the letter after ground-penetrating radar located some 200 suspected unmarked graves at a former residential school site in Kamloops, B.C., saying there was an "urgent need" for Canada to commit to projects of reconciliation.

Macdonald authorized the creation of the residential school system while he was in power in the 1880s. It is estimated that more than 150,000 First Nations, Mtis and Inuit children were forced to attend the government-funded, church-operated schools, where many suffered abuse and some died. The last such school closed in 1996.

"When it comes to Indigenous Peoples, this man did wrong," Whiteduck said. "The wrongdoings of the past we have to highlight these."

The commission's board of directors unanimously approved the recommendation to move forward with a renaming and engaging Indigenous communities.

"Iam thankful for the generosity of the participantswho shared views, stories and cultural references about the area, highlighting the profound connection the Algonquin Anishinabeg maintain with the river and surroundings," Nussbaum wrote.

With files from Andrew Foote, Stu Mills and The Canadian Press