Parks Canada, Mi'kmaq sign agreement to co-govern new P.E.I. park reserve - Action News
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PEI

Parks Canada, Mi'kmaq sign agreement to co-govern new P.E.I. park reserve

Following nearly 20 years of negotiations, the Mikmaq of P.E.I. and Parks Canada signed an agreement Thursday for co-governance of Pituamkek National Park Reserve, a chain of islands off the provinces North Shore.

It took a lot of effort and energy, L'nuey negotiator says of Pituamkek project

From left, Abegweit First Nation Chief Junior Gould, Lennox Island First Nation Chief Darlene Bernard and federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, sign a co-governance agreement for Pituamkek, a National Park Reserve off P.E.I.'s North Shore.
From left, Abegweit First Nation Chief Junior Gould, Lennox Island First Nation Chief Darlene Bernard and federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, sign the agreement Thursday. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

Following nearly 20 years of negotiations, the Mi'kmaq of P.E.I. and Parks Canada signed an agreement Thursday for co-governance of Pituamkek National Park Reserve, a chain of islands off the province's North Shore.

Pituamkek was first proposed by Mi'kmaw community leaders in 2005. There has been a lot of back and forth since then.

Tracey Cutcliffe, a senior negotiator for L'nuey, a group representing the Mi'kmaq of P.E.I., said it took some time to bring Parks Canada around to the idea.

"It took a lot of effort and energy on behalf of the communities for the leadership to keep this project top of mind with the federal government and with Parks Canada,"Cutcliffesaid.

"Since the feasibility study was announced in 2019, the negotiations have been collaborative and that's when I would say it moved from tough to easy, because it really has been a partnership at that negotiation table."

Tracey Cutcliffe stands, smiling, on a rocky beach.
Parks Canada and the Mi'kmaq have developed a strong partnership on Pituamkek, says Tracey Cutcliffe of L'Nuey. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

The park reserve is a chain of islands about 50 kilometres long, starting at the mouth of Malpeque Bay and stretching west to the shore near Alberton.

Parks Canada says it has set a budget of $107 million to manage the park reserve over the next 12 years, and a budget of $7.7 million per year following that.

It expectsPituamkek will be ready for visitors in two to three years. Infrastructure on the islands themselves will be minimal in order to protect natural habitats.

3,000-year-old archaeological sites

Retaining control of the land through a partnership with Parks Canada was central to the Mi'kmaq plan, and that was cemented in the agreement signed Thursday.

The islands include features of natural interest, such as the only formation of igneous rock on P.E.I. It is ecologically important because there has been little human activity on the islands in recent centuries.

Map showing where natural park reserve will be located, stretching from the mouth of Malpeque Bay to Northport.
The Pituamkek national park reserve consists of a long chain of islands. (CBC)

There are also sites of archaeological interest on the islands dating back as far as 2,000 B.C.

"The archaeological work that's been done here has helped us to really get a better and increasingly detailed picture of what the lives of the Mi'kmaq families that lived here was like," said Jesse Francis, Parks Canada's implementation manager for Pituamkek National Park Reserve.

Partners in preservation: Mi'kmaq and Parks Canada will co-govern new P.E.I. national park reserve

3 months ago
Duration 2:17
After two decades of negotiations, the Mikmaq of P.E.I. and Parks Canada signed an agreement Thursday to share in the management of the Pituamkek National Park Reserve. CBCs Julien Lecacheur spoke to Parks Canada's Jessie Francis and L'Nuey senior negotiator Tracey Cutcliffe about the importance of the site and what the agreement means.

"We know they were here year-round, we know the marine resources of [Malpeque] Bay was really important to them."

Shell middens investigated by archaeologists have found traces of oyster, crabs, seal and walrus.

Jesse Francis gestures at a shell midden emerging from a bank.
Archeologists are discovering a lot about Mi'kmaq history on Pituamkek, says Jesse Francis of Parks Canada. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

The park reserve has come together with the help of other partners, Francis said, including the Island Nature Trust and Nature Conservancy Canada.

"Both culturally and ecologically all the partners the Mi'kmaq, Parks Canada as well as the other partners in conservation have recognized how special Pituamkek is. It's been called one of the biological and natural highlights of eastern Canada," Francis said.

"There's so many aspects of national importance, importance for Islanders and all Canadians."

Cutcliffe hopes that Pituamkek can serve as a model for preserving other sites of Indigenous importance across Canada.

Bits of shell scattered amid rocks, soil, and grass.
These fragments are from shellfish harvested thousands of years ago. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

"Ensuring that the respect at negotiations tables is very much a nation-to-nation and government-to-government process can lead to some really special outcomes," she said.

She described the agreement signed Thursday as a tangible step toward regaining the self-governance that the Mi'kmaq had on the island chain before European contact.

With files from Julien Lecacheur and Sheehan Desjardins