Cheslatta Carrier Nation
Cheslatta T'En
Band number 620[1]
Cheslatta Carrier Nation is located in British Columbia
Cheslatta Carrier Nation
Cheslatta Carrier Nation
Cheslatta Carrier Nation band office, Burns Lake, British Columbia
Coordinates: 54°14′00″N 125°46′00″W / 54.23333°N 125.76667°W / 54.23333; -125.76667
Country Canada
Government
  TypeFirst Nations Council
  ChiefCorrina Leween[2]
  CouncillorsHazel Burt
Ted Jack[2]
Time zone[[UTC-7 UTC−7]] (Pacific Time Zone (PTZ))
  Summer (DST)DST
Postal code span
V0J 1E0[1]
Area code250[1]
Band Office Box 909, Southbank, Burns Lake, BC[1]

The Cheslatta Carrier Nation or Cheslatta T'En[3][4] (pronounced chez-la-ta), of the Dakelh (pronounced [tákʰɛɬ]) or Carrier people (Ta-cullies, meaning "people who go upon water"[5] is a First Nation of the Nechako River at the headwaters of the Fraser River.[6][7]

The Nechako (/nəˈtʃækoʊ/) River was once the greatest tributary of the Fraser River, [8] and the watershed was used by the Carrier people. For centuries the Cheslatta T'en hunted, fished and trapped there[3] and were part of an ancient trade network called the Grease Trail. The grease was actually eulachon oil.[9][Notes 1] from the oolichan, or candlefish, a fatty Pacific coast smelt. The oil was a highly prized commodity grease trail and was carried in bentwood boxes that would often leak. It was named the Alexander Mackenzie Voyageur Route, then renamed the Nuxalk-Carrier Grease Trail to honour the guides.[5] with the Nuxalk and Chilcotin.[10][3]

The Cheslatta village and Cheslatta Lake[11] (Tsetl'adak Bunk'ut - ″Peak Rock Lake″) flooded due to the construction of the Kenney Dam.[Notes 2] which created Nechako Reservoir, in 1952.

Most members now live on a dozen small scattered reserves just south of Francois Lake. In 2013 the Cheslatta Carrier Nation (CCN) "are based at Southbank, on the south shore of Francois Lake, 23 kilometres (14 mi) south of Burns Lake (Tselhk'azbunk'ut - ″hone lake″). They have eight reserves on 1,400 hectares (3,500 acres), with all reserves located at least 5 kilometres (3 mi) apart. They have 340 members, with 125 members living on reserve, although there is no central community. The band office and other community buildings are located on a reserve about two km south of the Southbank ferry dock."[13] The population on reserve is 167 and the population off reserve is 163, with a total of 330 according to the CNN INAC Active Band list reported in the 2011-2012 Language Needs Assessment report.[14]

Language

Cheslatta, locally called Dakelh,[15] is a dialect of the Carrier language of the Dene (Athabaskan) family of languages.[14] "Carrier is the general term for a complex of Athabaskan dialects in central British Columbia, adjoining (but clearly distinct from) Babine on the northwest and Chilcotin on the south."[15] Of the 330 members of the CCN, 8 are fluent Cheslatta speakers, 18 understand or speak it somewhat and 100 are learning speakers.[14]

Dakelh/Carrier is traditionally divided into Upper and Lower Carrier. Upper Carrier includes communities to the north of Fort St. James, around Stuart and Trembleur Lakes. Lower Carrier is spoken in communities in the south.[15] Linguists argue that Lower Carrier should be split into two dialect groups, the Fraser/Nechako and the Blackwater.[15] The Fraser/Nechako would include Prince George, Cheslatta, Stoney Creek, Nautley, and Stellakoh. The Blackwater group would include the Ulkatcho, Kluskus, Nazko, Red Bluff, and Anahim Lake.[15]

Chief and councillors

Corrina Leween is Chief, and Hazel Burt and Ted Jack are Councillors (2015–2018).[2] The Cheslatta Carrier Nation is represented by the British Columbia Assembly of First Nations (BCAFN), a Political Territorial Organization (PTO), a branch of the Assembly of First Nations. The BCAFN represents the 203 First Nations in British Columbia.[16]

Treaty process

The community, which is negotiating independently, has reached Stage 3 in the BC Treaty Process.[17]

History

"For centuries the Cheslatta T'en hunted, fished and trapped in the Nechako River (Nechakoh - ″Blackwater People's River″) area at the headwaters of the Fraser River (Lhtakoh - ″rivers within one another″), West Road River (Blackwater River) (Tanilhtl'uz - ″muddy water″), and Bulkley Rivers (Wet'sinkwha - "blue and green river", name of the Wetʼsuwetʼen, another branch of the Carrier people) as well as areas around Stuart (Nak'albun - ″Mount Pope Lake″) Babine lakes (Na-taw-bun-kut - "Long Lake") up to the borders of Bear Lake (Sustoobunk'ut, ᙐᔆᗜᗪᐣᗽᐪ - "black bear water lake", or Sustootibunk'ut, ᙐᔆᗜᗠᗪᐣᗽᐪ - "black bear water trail lake"). To the east, Carrier traditional territory extended as far as the Rocky Mountains.″ Long before contact with Europeans, they fished for trout, char, kokanee and whitefish in the freshwater lakes and traded with neighbouring villages for sockeye and chinook salmon. In later years many Cheslatta people had large vegetable gardens and herds of cattle and horses for which they grew fields of timothy and clover. Some worked for local sawmills or ranchers and ran traplines to earn cash to buy supplies they could not produce themselves."[3]

In 1792–93 Nuxalk-Carrier[5] guides led Alexander Mackenzie along the grease trail, a network of trails that were thousands of years old [5] from the Fraser River to Bella Coola.[5]

Flooding of traditional lands

In a major multi-authored interdisciplinary and multi-institution report entitled "Threats to Water Availability in Canada" published by Environment Canada and researched by National Water Research Institute, an entire section focused on the Nechako - Kemano Diversion as case study.[7]

In 1950 the B.C. government and the Aluminum Company of Canada (Alcan; Rio Tinto Alcan since 2008) through then-director Ray Edwin Powell entered into an agreement to facilitate the develop of a hydroelectric project that would support Alcan's new aluminum smelting industry at Kitimat, British Columbia. The $500-million project at Kitimat was the largest public-private partnership ever introduced in Canada in 1951.[18] British Columbia "signed over in perpetuity and at a nominal charge a huge area and much of its resource wealth-agricultural and park lands, water, forests and fish. All waters covered by the licence were to be diverted before the year 2000."[7] Phase I "redirected flows of 115 cubic metres per second on average from the Nechako River (Fraser basin) to spill westward by tunnel through the Coast Mountains, a vertical drop 16 times higher than Niagara Falls, into the Kemano River basin."

While the Kenney Dam was under construction and the Nechako Reservoir was filled, there was a 100% loss of flow in the upper Nechako River.[7]

In October 1952 the Nechako Reservoir started to fill. In 1954 the Kenney Dam was completed, creating a body 233 kilometres (145 mi) long that covered 880 square kilometres (339 sq mi).[12]

Alcan sent in a crew to build a stone cairn on the highest ground at the site of the village on Ootsa Lake just before it was flooded, and eventually a plaque was attached.[12]

Then Alcan restored 60% to 70% of the flow of the Nechako River "via a spillway that discharged, not from Kenney Dam but down the Cheslatta, a tributary of the Nechako. The comparatively large discharge down this small tributary scoured a deep channel in the unconsolidated sediments and deposited huge volumes of sediment in the upper Nechako.[6] Due to a smaller dam constructed near the mouth of the Cheslatta, homes and a graveyard of the local Indian community were flooded. The community was forced to relocate on short notice to a new area and unfamiliar way of life,[19] which led eventually to demands for redress of their losses."[7] In 1993, the Government of Canada paid the CCN $7.4 million in a settlement for inadequate compensation in 1952.[12]

Demographics

The Cheslatta Carrier Nation (CCN) now "have eight reserves on 1,400 hectares (3,500 acres), with all reserves located at least 5 kilometres (3 mi) apart. They have 340 members, with 125 members living on reserve."[13][1]

Economic development

Cheslatta Forest Products 2001-

In 1996 the CCN were awarded salvage rights to trees submerged by the Kemano power project. In 2001, the CCN, Prince George-based Carrier Forest Products Ltd. and Oosta Resources Ltd. formed Cheslatta Forest Products. This three-way joint venture partnership was owned by a group of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal residents from the Lakes Forest District, including six First Nations. Their $7.5 million sawmill at Ootsa Lake processed underwater salvage timber and timber killed by the mountain pine beetle.[13]

Social, educational and cultural programs and facilities

The CCN completed a multimillion-dollar innovative water filtration system in 2004. The Cheslatta "worked with engineers on a proposal to pump water out of Francois Lake, run it through a water filtration system up to a water tower, and then gravity feed it to a 44-kilometre (27 mi) mainline that would serve not only their community, but also the neighbouring Skin Tyee Band and Nee Tahi Buhn Band, as well as the non-native community."[13]

The Cheslatta Carrier Nation is constructing an online archive (pre- and post- flood).[20]

See also

Notes

  1. In the opening session of the Goldthorpe Inquiry into abuses in the Indian health system, in March 1980 in Alert Bay, seven elders ranging in age from 69 to 91 spoke at length of the healing qualities of traditional foods and herbs. In particular they "owed their survival to drinking oolachan oil"
  2. In their exhibition Living Landscapes, under "Dams and Reservoirs", the Royal British Columbia Museum included details about the construction of Kenney Dam. In selecting the site for the dam, Alcan project engineer Charles Dunn asked John Kendrick, "What is downstream there?' And I said, 'Well, I haven't seen the reach downstream from the lake here - where we were going to build the dam - to the canyon, but I have been to the canyon.' We went in from downstream looking at it for the idea of just a small power plant developing on the Nechako River. 'So what's the country like there?' and I said, 'Well, it's pretty wide'. And so we went downstream...(Royal British Columbia Museum nd "[12]

Citations

References

  • "First Nation Detail:Cheslatta Carrier Nation", Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, Gatineau, Quebec: Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, Government of Canada, retrieved 3 December 2013
  • "Cheslatta Carrier Nation", ARR, Ministry of and Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation, 2009, retrieved 14 December 2013
  • "You're never too small to achieve big things: A story from the Cheslatta Carrier Nation", BCABIC, British Columbia Aboriginal Business and Investment Council, 25 March 2013, archived from the original on 15 December 2013, retrieved 3 December 2013
  • "List of First Nations: Cheslatta Carrier Nation", BCAFN, British Columbia Assembly of First Nations, 2010, archived from the original on 2013-12-14
  • "About", BCAFN, British Columbia Assembly of First Nations, 2010a, archived from the original on 13 August 2013, retrieved 3 December 2013
  • "Nechako Reservoir". BC Geographical Names.
  • "Cheslatta Lake". BC Geographical Names.
  • "Cheslatta Lake", BCGNWS, BC Geographics Names, n.d.
  • "Cheslatta Carrier Nation v. British Columbia" (PDF), CEAA, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, 13 October 2000, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015, retrieved 31 March 2012
  • Christensen, Bev (1995), Too Good to be True: Alcan's Kemano Completion Project, Talonbooks
  • "Water Allocations, Diversion and Export §Nechako - Kemano Diversion - A Case Study", Threats to Water Availability in Canada, NWRI Scientific Assessment Report Series, Burlington, Ontario: National Water Research Institute, 2004, p. 128, ISBN 0-662-35826-0, archived from the original on 2013-03-12 via Environment Canada
  • "Language Needs Assessment: Cheslatta Carrier Nation", FPHLCC, Aboriginal Languages Initiative (ALI), First Peoples' Heritage Language and Culture Council, 2011–2012, archived from the original on 5 December 2013, retrieved 4 December 2013
  • Franezyk, Walter (5 March 1980), Indian health inquiry open in Bay, Alert Bay, Vancouver Island, BC: North Island Gazette
  • Golla, Victor (2007), "North America", in Moseley, Christopher (ed.), Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages, London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-7007-1197-0
  • Gomez-Amaral, J.C.; Day, J.C. (1987). W. Nicholaichuk; F. Quinn (eds.). The Kemano diversion: a hindsight assessment. Proceedings of the Symposium on Interbasin Transfer of Water: Impacts and Research Needs for Canada. Saskatoon: CWRA NHRC. pp. 137–152.
  • "Ootsa Lake-Nechako Reservoir", Heritage British Columbia, 2009
  • Kellerhals, R; Church, Michael; Davies, L.B. (1979), "Morphological effects of interbasin river diversions", Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering, 6 (1): 18–31, doi:10.1139/l79-003
  • Neuberger, Richard (1951), Engineers Invade Another Wilderness - Huge Canadian Power Project Marks 20th Century Frontier Boom, Popular Science, pp. 96–104, retrieved 3 December 2013 Detailed and illustrated Popular Science article on the Kemano Hydro Project.\
  • "Dams and Reservoirs", RBCM, Living Landscapes, Victoria, BC: Royal British Columbia Museum, n.d., archived from the original on 2013-12-09
  • "The Cheslatta T'en and the Kemano Hydro Project", Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, AANRC, 1996, archived from the original on 11 December 2007, retrieved 3 December 2013
  • Roy, Susan (October 2010), These Mysterious People Shaping History and Archaeology in a Northwest Coast Community, McGill/Queen's University Press, p. 240, ISBN 9780773537217
  • "Grease Trails", SFU, Burnaby, BC: Simon Fraser University Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, 2008, retrieved 7 December 2013
  • Simard, Jean (n.d.). "Home - Dialogue Sur L'Aluminium". L'Association de l'aluminium du Canada (AAC). Archived from the original on 2011-09-03. Retrieved 2012-12-16.
  • Windsor, J.E.; McVey, J.A. (June 2005), "Annihilation of Both Place and Sense of Place: The Experience of the Cheslatta T'En Canadian First Nation within the context of Large-Scale Environmental Projects", The Geographical Journal, 171 (2): 146–165, doi:10.1111/j.1475-4959.2005.00156.x This paper investigated loss of sense of place of deracinated peoples by examining the case of the Cheslatta T'En who were "forcibly removed from their ancestral lands in the 1950s so as to allow for the construction of a private hydroelectric dam by the Aluminum Company of Canada (Alcan)."
  • Wood, June (1 April 2013), Home to the Nechako: The River and the Land, Heritage House Publishing Co. Ltd., p. 176, ISBN 978-1927527139
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