NEWS: Environmental and First Nations respond to Revised Lower Athabasca Regional Plan
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sheila muxlow
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Aug 31, 2011, 12:43:43 AM8/31/11
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to Eriel Deranger, Chelsea Flook
Please see below for a response by Sierra Club Prairie and Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation to the release of the Lower Athabasca Land Use Plan by the Alberta Government Yesterday.
Revised
Draft of Lower Athabasca Regional Plan highlights Alberta’s Cavalier
attitude towards environmental protection and Indigenous Rights
For Immediate Release
August 30, 2011
Edmonton
— Alberta’s Government’s Department of Sustainable Resource Develop
released their latest draft of the disputed Lower Athabasca Region Plan
(LARP) leaving little to be desired by both environmental groups and
First Nations alike. Previous draft’s had both groups unanimously
agreeing that LARP left loopholes allowing for exemptions to
environmental standards and led to a further degradation of
constitutionally protected treaty rights. This recent draft is an
insult to both groups as it did little to incorporate previous
recommendations largely ignoring growing concerns to protect critical
habitat of caribou and vital Indigenous traditional territories and
rights.
Many
First Nation groups are still trying to unravel how this new draft will
impact their rights and territories but John Rigney, who works for the
Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation stated “Sections on Aboriginal input on
pages 33 and 63 highlights that the government of Alberta has chosen to
be willfully blind to the input of First Nation governments as well as
to many court rulings on First Nation rights. The government seems to
be fully prepared to trample the Aboriginal people of the north as it
has done for so long in the agricultural regions of the province. This
new draft of the LARP trumpets Alberta's uninformed disregard for Treaty
8 and the Constitution for the world to see, as well as its cavalier
attitude toward environmental protection.”
Eriel
Deranger, Interim Executive Director of Sierra Club Prairie commented
on the recent release of the revised LARP, "Despite major efforts by
both local citizens and First Nations to put forward recommendations for
a land use plan that will benefit both the environment and the economy,
we see the Government of Alberta disregard these requests and
ignorantly turn pristine Boreal ecosystems into dollar signs for
corporations.” Eriel went on to state, “In addition to blatant
violation of Indigenous and Treaty rights this plan represents,
implementing this plan will come with the real costs of more air and
water pollution, more cancer and health problems, and more species
pushed to the brink of extinction. It is inevitable this plan will serve
to further escalate growing opposition tar sands development and expose
the illegitimacy of the Alberta Conservatives as effective decision
makers for the province."
Environmental
and First Nation groups are calling for the regional plan to be
reviewed by Indigenous knowledge holders and independent scientists to
ensure adequate environmental and Indigenous rights protection. Many
First Nation groups are continuing to pressure the government for more
meaningful avenues of consultation and participation in co-management to
ensure traditional lands and treaty rights are fully protected allowing
for the continuation of traditional livelihoods in the region.
- 30 -
For further information: Eriel Deranger, Interim Executive Director, Sierra Club Prairie 780-903-6598
John Rigney, Special Projects, Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation 780-742-5397 Sheila Muxlow, Community Organizer, Sierra Club Prairie 780-660-0312