Rio Tinto Agreement

Rio Tinto agreement good for Cheslatta

Mar 5, 2020 | 3:59 PM

CHESLATTA – The “real work” is set to begin after an historic dedal was inked between the Cheslatta Carrier First Nation and Rio Tinto last week.

According to the Rio Tinto website, the New Day Agreement “… will promote the social and economic well-being of the Cheslatta Carrier Nation through engagement in the areas of training, employment, business opportunities and environmental stewardship. Measures include support for a remote training center built on Cheslatta property in 2018, which will deliver diverse trades, skills, safety, marine and driver training courses. The agreement also establishes the New Day Scholarship Fund, which can provide scholarships for Cheslatta students of all ages.”

“The agreement also provides for the creation of the Nechako Reservoir Stewardship Program, a joint initiative that will leverage local knowledge to maintain the Nechako Reservoir watershed ecosystem…”

“The real work’s going start with implementation and implementation does mean the healing of the land, the water, relationship building with our neighbours who are impacted up and downstream,” says Corinna Leween, Chief of the Cheslatta Carrier First Nation,

One of the communities impacted downstream is Vanderhoof.

Mayor Gerry Thiessen recently met with government officials to talk about some form of water use plan.

“One of the requests that we, as a community, have always asked for is a water-use plan,” explains Thiessen. “So on every other Hydro-generating reservoir dam in British Columbia has one, other than the one of the Nechako.”

Government wouldn’t commit to a water-use plan, however, but have agreed to a water engagement process, which gives communities the opportunity to be involved in identifying values in the river.