Little that Alberta First Nation can do as logging company destroys part of protected ancestral trail nationalpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nationalpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Last summer, a logging company cleared approximately 1,200 metres of an Indigenous ancestral trail in Bigstone Cree Nation territory, Treaty No. 8 region (northern Alberta), in spite of government regulations in place to protect land.
As an ancient archeological site, the trail should have been protected by the Alberta Historical Resource Act. A Historical Resource Impact Assessment should have been conducted to assess the site’s protected value.
The logging company, Alberta-Pacific Forest Industries Inc., conducted a “desktop” assessment. But no one physically visited the area, and the assessment missed identifying the trail.
The trail is a valued cultural place, as the Bigstone Cree Nation Lands Department repeatedly informed Alberta-Pacific. Darren Decoine, the Bigstone Lands Department GIS technician, repeatedly requested detailed maps of the logging plans from Alberta-Pacific, but he says they were never provided. The company is supposed to provide shapefiles (maps
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The Ministry of Alberta Culture, Multiculturalism and Status of Women has created a new program Leaders in Equality Award of Distinction (LEAD) which will support students who are working to reduce gender discrimination in their communities, or who are studying in fields where their gender is traditionally under-represented.
The program has two finding streams, the Women in STEM Award, which was previously announced in September 2020, and the Persons Case Scholarship.
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The Women in STEM stream is open to women under 30 who are pursuing studies in science, technology, engineering or mathematics.