Kawartha Nishnawbe block reconstruction work on Burleigh Falls Dam - Action News
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Indigenous

Kawartha Nishnawbe block reconstruction work on Burleigh Falls Dam

Members from an OntarioFirst Nation continue to block access to a dam reconstruction site because they say they were not properly consulted by Parks Canada.

Group says barricades are over lack of consultation by Parks Canada

Burleigh Falls Dam is part of theTrent-Severn Waterway, now a national historic siteoperated by Parks Canada. The dam was originallyconstructed in 1912. (Dean Wood)

Members from an OntarioFirst Nation continue to block access to a dam reconstruction site because they say they were not properly consulted by Parks Canada.

Nodin Webb, leader and spokesperson for Kawartha Nishnawbe First Nation, said his community isn't necessarily opposed to the work on the Burleigh FallsDam, but Parks Canada should've involved them in the decision-making process.

Two barricades were erected last week that prevent access to the worksite in Burleigh Falls, Ont.,130 kilometres northeast of Toronto.

"We're out there defending the land until we can get confirmation from Parks Canada that there will be no further construction or demolition until they consult us, a procedure they are legally required to do," he said.

The Kawartha Nishnawbe have vowed not to move until Parks Canada properly consults with them about the reconstruction. (Submitted by Amber Seager)

The Kawartha Nishnawbecreated a communitynear Burleigh Falls in the early 1900s withfive families from nearby Curve Lake First Nation who had lost their Indian status through enfranchisement.

The dam, which was originally constructed in 1912, is a part of the Trent-Severn Waterway, and is now a national historic site operated by Parks Canada.

The Parks Canadawebsite indicates the dam is being fully rebuilt and construction is scheduled to be completedin the summer of 2024.

Indigenous Services Canada said in an emailKawartha Nishnawbe is not recognized as an Indian Act band.

The community's lawyer, Christopher Reid disagrees and hasbeen exchanging emails with Parks Canada and the federal government.

"They took away status from these people and forced them off reserves, forced them to establish a separate community on their own where they literally cleared the land, built their homes without any assistance and built their community."

Public safety

David Britton, director of Ontario Waterways with Parks Canada, said in a statement Parks Canada has offered to meet with the Kawartha Nishnawbe on the Burleigh Falls Dam replacement project both in 2016 and more recently to understand their concerns regarding the potential impacts of the project.

Brittonconfirms Parks Canada has met with Curve Lake First Nation and other Williams Treaties First Nations on the first phase of the project andis working todevelop fisheries monitoring and mitigation plans.

Zhaawnong Webb, Nodin Webb and Jack Hoggarth at the blockade near the Burleigh Falls Dam construction site. (Submitted by Amanda Seager)

He also explained that in its current condition, the dam poses a risk.

"A significant void at the base of the dam undermines the dam's structural integrity, and is cause for concern regarding both public safety, and the protection of properties and species, including an important walleye fishery."

Webb denied there have been any offers of consultation but in email correspondence provided to CBC byReid, Parks Canada offeredto meetand share its plans with the Kawartha Nishnawbe in three separate messages.

Reid indicated the level of consultation offered by Britton and Parks Canada is different than that received by Curve Lake First Nation.

He said in a statement, "offering to meet is not nearly the same thing as engaging in the kind of consultations which are legally required and which they held with communities which have much less connection to Burleigh Falls than Kawartha Nishnawbe."

Emily Whetung, chief of Curve Lake, wrote in a statement, "We recognize that the complicated history of the Kawartha Nishinawbe, their relationship to the land at Burleigh Falls, and their assertion with the federal government, and we respect that they have an independent perspective.

"However, the Burleigh Dam is located within the recognized pre-Confederation and Williams Treaties Territory, and we feel a responsibility to protect the environment and species in the area as the reconstruction project moves forward."