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N.B. Wolastoqey chiefs skeptical of new Indigenous Affairs minister appointment - New Brunswick

The previous minister, Arlene Dunn, resigned from cabinet last week. Higgs has since chosen Natural Resources Minister Mike Holland to take over the portfolio.

Sussex
New-brunswick
Canada
Arlene-dunn
Brunswick-wolastoqey
Mike-holland
Blaine-higg
Alan-polchies
Indigenous-affairs
New-brunswick-wolastoqey
Premier-blaine-higg
Natural-resources-minister-mike-holland

Higgs doubles down on stance that Wolastoqey title claim threatens smaller property owners

Premier Blaine Higgs is doubling down on his stance that an Aboriginal title claim for roughly half of New Brunswick could impact properties owned by smaller landowners who are not named in the claim launched by the province's Wolastoqey nations.

Kingsclear
New-brunswick
Canada
Matawaskiye-madawaska
Blaine-higgs
Welamuktok-oromocto
Neqotkuk-tobique
Gabriel-atwin
Brunswick-court
Pc-party
Premier-blaine-higgs
New-brunswick-court

Wolastoqey Chiefs, forestry company sign 'historic' agreement

UPDATED: N.B. Won't Renew First Nation Tax-Sharing Agreements

The New Brunswick legislature in Fredericton. (Image: Brad Perry) The New Brunswick government says it will not be renewing tax-sharing agreements with First Nation communities. Premier Blaine Higgs made the announcement Tuesday, calling the existing agreements “unsustainable and unfair.” The agreements allow First Nation communities to keep a percentage of the provincial tax revenues they collect on-reserve through the sale of tobacco, gasoline and other fuels. Currently, the communities keep 95 per cent of the first $8 million in provincial tax revenues and 70 per cent on amounts above that. Higgs said about $44 million will be refunded to First Nations this year and that number is projected to reach $75 million in 2031-32.

Madawaska
Ontario
Canada
Canadians
Blaine-higgs
Arlene-dunn
Justice-richard-petrie
Patricia-bernard
Aboriginal-affairs
A-court
New-brunswick
First-nation

N.B. Won't Renew First Nation Tax-Sharing Agreements

The New Brunswick legislature in Fredericton. (Image: Brad Perry) The New Brunswick government says it will not be renewing tax-sharing agreements with First Nation communities. Premier Blaine Higgs made the announcement Tuesday, calling the existing agreements “unsustainable and unfair.” The agreements allow First Nation communities to keep a percentage of the provincial tax revenues they collect on-reserve through the sale of tobacco, gasoline and other fuels. Currently, the communities keep 95 per cent of the first $8 million in provincial tax revenues and 70 per cent on amounts above that. Higgs said about $44 million will be refunded to First Nations this year and that number is projected to reach $75 million in 2031-32.

Madawaska
Ontario
Canada
Canadians
Blaine-higgs
Arlene-dunn
Patricia-bernard
Aboriginal-affairs
New-brunswick
First-nation
First-nations
Aboriginal-affairs-minister-arlene-dunn

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