Private property concerns highlighted as province suspends parts of DRIPA
PRINCE GEORGE – Following Premier David Eby’s announcement to suspend certain parts of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, also known as DRIPA, one BC Conservative MLA is highlighting concerns this could create for private property owners.
“We’re just leaving this air of uncertainty, both for First Nations and for the public that wants that certainty for their private properties and for investments in the province,” said Prince George – Mackenzie MLA Kiel Giddens.
Giddens calls private property the “underpinning of our economic base in Western Society,” so he says uncertainty caused by the decision to pause certain aspects of DRIPA, on top of the lack of clarity surrounding what specifically will be paused, is cause for concern.
