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Interlake First Nations say province didn’t consult them before blocking access to traditional hunting lands

Bit by bit, a provincial gravel blockade along an access road east of Lake St. Martin tumbled earlier this week, as a group of First Nations in Manitoba’s Interlake region gathered to remove it and get answers about why it was put there in the first place.

An orange track loader machine scooped gravel off the new Lake St. Martin Access Road, leading to a flood-outlet channel diversion, as demonstrators held signs reading “274 Our Land” and “First Nations Treaties Matter,” while chanting “This is our land” on Friday.

Chief Lawrence Letander of Dauphin River First Nation said the province didn’t notify Interlake First Nations before it restricted access to their hunting territory — a swath of land where community members also harvest traditional medicines.

He said he’s not sure when the gravel was put there or why that area was blocked off.

“That’s what we’re going to go find out,” Letander said before the group marched past where the line of gravel once stood.

An orange track loader machine digs its bucket into a line of gravel along a road in an open marshy area, with a treeline in the background
A group of First Nations in Manitoba’s Interlake region removed a provincial blockade along an access road east of Lake St. Martin on Friday. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

“Obviously, they’re infringing on our treaty rights. We have every right to hunt here. We’ve hunted here for many, many years,” he said, hoping that the wildlife and traditional plant medicines haven’t been affected by construction in the area.

After a devastating 2011 flood around Lake St. Martin destroyed homes and displaced residents for years, the province built an emergency outlet channel to divert flood waters, according to a 2019 environmental assessment report for the access road.

The Manitoba government has proposed building a 23-kilometre-long permanent flood-outlet channel, repurposing the emergency channel in the project, which will also include a water-control structure and a bridge.

Infrastructure Minister Lisa Naylor said in a statement to CBC News that a gate was installed to restrict access where the newly-built access road meets Idylwild Road “as part of the environmental licensing process.”

“This gate was originally meant to limit environmental impacts of increased access to the area from construction of the new Lake St. Martin Access Road,” Naylor said, adding that the gate is “being reconsidered” due to feedback from First Nations.

The minister says the government respects the rights of First Nations and officials will continue to meet with Indigenous leaders. She said the province is focused on “working together in partnership to find solutions that build trust nation-to-nation.”

A man with dark hair wears a camouflage shirt in an open marshy area, with a treeline in the background
Karl Zadnik, executive director for the Interlake Reserves Tribal Council, said the province breached treaty rights by cutting off access to traditional hunting lands. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Interlake Reserves Tribal Council executive director Karl Zadnik, whose group represents seven First Nations in the region, says the province breached their treaty rights by blocking access to traditional hunting territory.

He said “the province has lied to us” and hasn’t adequately consulted First Nations about the channel project and the potential impact of construction on the land and their livelihoods.

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