First Nations Government
Europeans first arrived in
British Columbia in the 1770s. At that
time the aboriginal inhabitants of British Columbia, now called Indians or
First Nations People or Natives, were organized various communities throughout
the province. Each community had its
own rules and laws, and its own government.
With the establishment of
colonies, and later the province of British Columbia, most of these First
Nations communities came under intense pressures.
·
Diseases brought by the settler populations decimated
their numbers;
·
Settlers and prospectors occupied large chunks of First
Nations territory;
·
Missionaries and government sought to induce them to
abandon their cultures, going so far as to seize First Nations children and put
them into residential schools;
·
The colonial and then federal governments unilaterally
imposed new rules on First Nations governments – replacing their traditional
government with appointed, and later elected, band councils and restricting
First Nations territory to small reservations [link to glossary];
·
The federal government passed laws banning the potlatch
(a key feature of coastal First Nations culture) and fundraising to complain
about the removal of First Nations lands.
The federal and provincial
governments, for many years, viewed First Nations as wards of the state,
incapable of making their own decisions and needing to be looked after. While there is increasing recognition that
First Nations governments should have broader powers and more self-control,
there is still significant disagreement over what this new form of First
Nations government should look like.
The Indian Act
Under the Constitution
Act, 1867, the federal government has powers over “Indians and Indian
Lands”. To this end, the federal government has set
up a department exercise these powers. The
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC
) is responsible for the administration of land and resources on reserves.
The main piece of federal
legislation governing First Nations is the Indian Act. An earlier version of this Act replaced the
traditional First Nations governments with government structures that the
Canadian government was more familiar with and could work with more
easily. The current version of the
Indian Act continues to set out what First Nations government must look
like. (This is not to say that all
First Nations peoples have accepted this model).
Under the Indian Act:
·
A community of “Indians” living on a reservation are
known as a band and are governed by a Chief and Council.
·
In most communities the Chief and Council function very
much like the mayor and council of a municipal government.
·
Under the Indian Act, a Band Council only has certain
powers which can only be exercised over the reserve and Band members.
See the page on the Indian Act for more information on the powers of the
Band Council.
Some B.C. Indian Bands (West Bank,
Musqueam, Lheit Lit’en (Fort George), Nauatqua (Anderson Lake), and Squamish
First Nations) have broader powers to create land use plans and by-laws under
the First Nations Land Management Act. There are also a small number of special acts
changing the powers of other First Nations governments. These include the Nisga’a
Final Agreement Act and the Sechelt Indian
Band Self-Government Act.
Self-Government and Rights
The Indian
Act is a grant of powers from the federal government to a band
council. However, First Nations
Governments existed long before the Indian Act and there is increasing
recognition that traditional rights of governance. First Nations Councils are increasingly simply asserting their
right to self-government, passing laws and electing
governments without following the requirements of the Indian Act. In some cases the Canadian courts are
recognizing that First Nations self-government does exist in Canadian law.
In addition, the Canadian
courts have recognized that First Nations may have aboriginal
title and/or other rights over areas in
their traditional territory (not just reserve lands). These traditional rights include some rights to control what
decisions are made about those lands and rights, and may (the courts haven’t
said yet) include the right to create laws about the use of lands with
aboriginal title.
First Nations have a right to
be consulted (in a meaningful way) about government or industry proposals that
may affect their claims of aboriginal title.
In addition the provincial and federal governments are trying to
negotiate modern treaties that will define the
rights and title that First Nations possess.
Since Band Councils usually speak for the First Nation, this gives Band
Councils responsibilities not reflected in the Indian Act.
Related Guide Pages:
·
Indian Act.
·
Aboriginal Rights and Title.
For More Information about First Nations Government:
·
B.C. First Nation Profiles of Bands.
·
“First Nations
Communities in B.C.” from B.C. Government’s Treaty Negotiation Office.
·
Union of B.C.
Indian Chiefs Website.
·
Northern
and Indian Affairs Canada Website.
·
“An
Historical Look at Canada & B.C.'s Relationship With First Nations”,
a brief summary of historical events related to First Nations in British Columbia
as presented by the Cariboo Tribal Council.