Transparency Act : Resource company payments to First Nations unveiled (CBC News Sudbury – December 14, 2014)

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury

Most First Nations in northeastern Ontario receive funds from a mining, forestry or power company

For the first time, the amount of money northeastern Ontario First Nations receive from agreements with private resource companies has been made public. The figures were included in financial documents posted under the new First Nations Transparency Act.

Many bands have been reluctant to discuss specific figures in the past and the impact benefit agreements often prohibit the companies from discussing payment to neighbouring First Nations without band permission.

Some of the most surprising numbers in the newly released financial records are for Moose Cree First Nation on the James Bay Coast.

Its balance sheet shows $1.5 million coming from Detour Gold last year. Also listed under First Nation revenue is $3 million in company stock. But it also shows Moose Cree losing $6.2 million last year in the sale of Detour Gold shares.

Repeated phone calls and emails to the First Nation’s elected officials and administrative staff were not returned. Most First Nations in northeastern Ontario do get some amount of money from a mining, forestry or power company.

All of the bands along the James Bay Coast receive money from DeBeers, for its Victor diamond mine near Attawapiskat.

Fort Albany received $544,000 under the DeBeers impact benefit agreement last year.

Chief Andrew Solomon said that money helps make up for what he described as chronic under-funding from the federal government.

“Does it make us rich? No. Keeps us afloat.”

Helps to ‘balance the books’

Many other First Nations run their own businesses.

A gas station run by Chapleau Cree First Nation made $2.8 million in sales last year, almost double the $1.3 million in federal funding the band receives.

“Very important,” Chief Keeter Corston said of the gas bar, which made a profit of $150,000 last year. “That’s why we balance our books. That’s one of the reasons.”

Some of the financial documents are not as clear on where the money comes from, listing multi-million-dollar figures under the vague category of “other revenue.”

The documents posted under the new federal law also show that First Nations politicians in northeastern Ontario make significantly more than their municipal counterparts.

At the high end is Moose Cree First Nation, where chief Norm Hardisty makes $154,000 and even deputy chief Earl Cheechoo makes significantly more than the chiefs in other communities at $112,000.

Repeated calls and emails to Moose Cree were not returned.

For the rest of this article, click here: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury/transparency-act-resource-company-payments-to-first-nations-unveiled-1.2861817