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Assembly of First Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde honoured for years of service

Advisory group pushing to make Regina 100 per cent renewable

Article content Sidhu explained that CAG will negotiate consultations between community members and policy decision makers to ensure the plan is cohesive. “We will start to narrow in on things that the city can do to basically kickstart these efforts as real efforts,” he added. The group is currently comprised of members representing 25 organizations from a variety of sectors. Among them are energy conglomerates Wascana Solar Co-operative, SaskPower, and Saskatchewan Electric Vehicle Association; educational bodies like Miller High School Environmental Club and Regina Catholic School Division; and First Nations groups including File Hills Qu’Appelle Tribal Council and Metis Nation of Saskatchewan.

Sask addictions centre awaits decision on relocation to resort village amid support, pushback

Posted: Mar 02, 2021 12:00 PM CT | Last Updated: March 2 Pine Lodge is an addictions treatment centre that serves inpatient clients in 28-day periods. It operated in Indian Head for years until damage caused by fire and smoke forced the facility closed in December. (Trent Peppler/CBC) Foster Monson says it s been frustrating waiting to learn whether Pine Lodge Treatment Centre will be able to welcome clients back in the near future.  The addictions recovery centre operated for years in Indian Head, Sask, but a fire in December forced it to close. Monson said staff have located the only suitable new space in the area for relocation in Fort San, a small resort village near Fort Qu Appelle, Sask. He said the vacant Calling Lakes Centre, used for years as the Prairie Christian Training Centre, would be a good fit.

Breaking barriers: For Thomas Benjoe, building Indigenous wealth is a fundamental part of reconciliation

The Globe and Mail Katie Underwood Published February 26, 2021 Tenille K Campbell/The Globe and Mail Canada’s ongoing reconciliation effort with Indigenous people has so far taken myriad forms, many symbolic: a commissioned report, formal apologies from government and growing public awareness around the issue of land rights. But, as it is understood by many leaders in the Indigenous community, reconciliation will be fundamentally incomplete without economic influence and the ability to establish livelihoods for current and future generations. With that in mind, in 2010, FHQ Developments was founded by the 11-member First Nations communities of File Hills Qu’Appelle Tribal Council, which represents over 15,000 First Nations citizens and 435,000 acres of reserve lands in Treaty 4 territory (encompassing much of southern Saskatchewan). The alliance’s primary purpose is to build Indigenous wealth and all that entails: equity ownership, the development and prosperity of Indi

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