Mtis hunting rights have roots in northern Ontario: 'It's something that needed to be done' - Action News
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Mtis hunting rights have roots in northern Ontario: 'It's something that needed to be done'

Mtis hunting and fishing rights were won by a man from Sault Ste. Marie and nearly 25 years later, the nation is hoping to step even closer to self-government.

Thanks to the Powley decision of 2004, today 1,400 Mtis are allowed to hunt and fish in Ontario

The late Steve Powley of Sault Ste. Marie fought his charge for illegally hunting a moose in 1993 and won hunting and fishing rights for Mtis people. (Metis Nation of Ontario)

Hunters and Gatherersis a series looking at hunting and fishing in northern Ontario, how Indigenous rights can divide people, how some northerners find ways to share the resources and what sharing the land means for reconciliation.

After centuries of being ashamed of their indentity, Mtis people were starting to assert themselves by Oct. 221993, when Steve and Rod Powley of Sault Ste. Marie were butchering a moose in their backyard.

Their court battle to have the right to kill that moose and harvest other plants and animals in the same woods their ancestors did would go a long way to making the Mtis a nation.

"The community has been able to lift their heads and be proud of who they are," says Mtis Nation of Ontario chair France Picotte, who is from Timmins.

Brenda Powley, Steve's wife and Rod's mother, remembers the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestryofficials coming that day after a neighbour reported the moose being hunted out of season.

"They take the meat and then came back and laid the charges. It's a bit sad, because you're out your meat for the winter. And this time because he decided he wasn't going to just pay the fine he was going to fight the case this time," Brenda said.

A great-grandniece of famous Mtis leader, Louis Riel, lawyer Jean Teillet represented the Powleys of Sault Ste. Marie in their precedent-setting hunting rights case. (University of Toronto)

To fight that case, the Powleys enlisted Jean Teillet.

She was a young lawyer then, just passed the bar. She was also the great-grandniece of Louis Riel and one of several Mtis leaders who was looking for a case which they could use to enshrine Mtishunting and fishing rights, as the Sparrow decision had done for First Nations people three years earlier.

Teillet says Steve Powleylike many other Mtiswere tired of hunting at night to avoid conservation officers.

"Mtis people have a joke that most kids grow up thinking moose are nocturnal creatures because everybody hunted at night," says Teillet.

Teilletargued the case at local courts, then appealed to higher and higher levels of the justice system.

She remembers one Crown attorney who was constantly asking for adjournments and she gave a big speech, calling on the judge to not delay the trial any further.

"He finally looked at me and said 'Ms. Teillet. This is clearly going all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. You don't want me to deny them an adjournment and then have this whole case be about that.' And I said to myself 'OK, suck it up Jean. That's what he's telling you: suck it up. Just keep going.'"

The case did keep going for 11 years and in 2004, came the Supreme Court ruling that the Powleys and other Mtispeople had the right to hunt and fish in their traditional territory.

"I thought you get the big broad principle set out and that'll be it," says Teillet.

"That is exactly what did not happen. Everybody dug in their heels and said 'Well, maybe the SaultSte. Marie do, but that doesn't mean the ManitobaMtisdo. And we had to start taking cases all across theMtisnation homeland."

A map.
A map from the Mtis Nation of Ontario showing the traditional harvesting territories across the province. (Mtis Nation of Ontario )

Teillet says Mtis people in the western provinces are still regularly charged by conservation officers.

In Ontario, that ended whenthe MtisNation struck an agreement with the provincial government in 2007.

In order to access their hunting and fishing rights, a Mtisperson has to prove an ancestral connection to one of the seven traditional Mtis communities in the province and then apply for a Mtisharvester's card.

Mtis Nation of Ontario chair France Picottesays they currently are allowed to hand out 1,400 cards and there is a waiting list of Mtis people hoping to get one.

Picotte is hopeful that an ongoing audit will eventually lead to an unlimited number of Mtis people being allowed to exercise their rights.

But the Mtis Nation of Ontario also has a set of harvesting rules for members to follow, including set seasons for moose and deer hunting, a ban on fishing spawning areas and an overarching principle to only harvest what you need.

"If we have these rights and we abuse them and harvest anytime, during calfing or we harvest in spawning areas, then our next generation and the generation after that and the generation after that, they don't have anything to exercise their rights on," says Picotte.

France Picotte of Timmins is the chair of the Mtis Nation of Ontario. (Giacomo Panico/CBC News)

But the Mtisharvesting rules are more guidelines. What they really determine is whether or not the Mtis Nation will represent a member in court, if they happen to be charged by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.

Picotte says they will defend a member if they were abiding by the Mtis Nation rules, but she hopes to move towards Mtis having their own enforcement system for hunting and fishing.

"It's somethingthat we need to do because everything that we do we try to do towards that ability to self-govern, which means self-regulation also," she says.

Picottesays these steps towards nationhood all follow down the path set out by the Powley decision.

Steve Powley has since passed away, but his widow Brenda says having their name on a landmark court decision continues to be a source of pride for her family.

"It wasn't so much proud of his name on it. He didn't fight the court case on apersonal level.He was very proud that he could passsomething onto hisgrandkids," she says.

"Sometimes you think it's forgotten and you meetsomebody and they say 'are you related to thosePowleys?' It's kind of embarrassing, but it's proud. It's something that needed to be done."