Couchiching FN Toll Booth
Couchiching FN Toll Booth
Couchiching FN Toll Booth
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Healthy eating
Dr. Dimitrios about healthy crowd Friday Dr. Vergidis & Vergidis shared his insights eating and exercise with the evening during Dinner with Friends, an educational fundraiser for the Riverside Foundation for Health Care at the Memorial Sports Centre. The dinner netted about $8,500. See story, photo on A5. Duane Hicks photo
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Im very happy. Its my first year as chairman. Things went very well. Kevin Begin
both his position and Chris Wielinga taking the lead as treasurer. Im very happy, he remarked. Its my first year as chairman. Things went very well. With Begin and Wielinga ascending to a pair of the top jobs, newer contributors pitched in to organize some of the raffles. Begin was impressed with their performances. We had some newer people, we gave them some big responsibilities, he noted. The younger bucks took the reins and we were impressed. They did a great job. The committee had a little bit of a younger flavour to it. They brought some younger, fresh ideas, he added. Begin thinks the newer blood at More ways to save: No Mobility Contract No Connection Fee FREE Canadian Roaming
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the top will help lead to a bit of a different feel for the event in the coming years. Change is good, he reasoned. It keeps it fresh. Begin said his biggest challenge was being unsure as to whether he was on the right path, but the support of the committee helped him make it through. It was not knowing if I was doing anything wrong, he noted. Everybody kept asking me, So, how do you think its going? and I said, Well, if it was going badly, I dont know if Id know, he recalled. Everybody gave me a lot of encouragement. But Begin stressed even though the younger members led the Please see DU, A10
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to be very difficult to put on a quality production. Turvey said he personally finds the possible loss of [July 1] celebrations in a border community to be devastating. At this time, Turvey said the FITS committee needs all the help it can get to try and keep the Fun in the Sun tradition going here. We are at a crisis point, he stressed, adding if theres corporate sponsors or individual sponsors out there, they are encouraged to contact one of the FITS committee members as soon as possible. Realistically, we need to know in the next week to 10 days, Turvey said. Those wanting to help out the Fun in the Sun committee can contact FITS chair Paul Bock (274-5353) or Turvey (2760800), or e-mail fitsff@shaw.ca
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INSIDE
Local federal and provincial politicians say a serious response to solving the longstanding issues with Couchiching First Nation is needed from government in the wake of the bands announcement last week that it plans to put up a toll booth near the west end of the Noden Causeway starting May 21. I think this is an expression of frustration by Couchiching, said Kenora-Rainy River MPP Howard Hampton, stressing the band has given the provincial and federal governments time to respond to the issues at hand.
The band councils decision stems from longstanding issues over compensation for the land which Highway 11 was built upon and what it sees as a failure to take action on the contaminated soil at the former site of the J.A. Mathieu Sawmill dipping pondswhere six residences now sit. Prior to putting up the toll booth, the band said there will be traffic slowdown to hand out pamphlets outlining the reason for their actions. The band also plans to institute a fee to launch boats at the Five-Mile Dock, with proceeds raised going towards both social and economic development projects.
I think the frustration is this. [Couchiching has] tried meeting with officials, they have tried going through all the official channels over and over again on these issues, and they just feel like they are not getting a response, said Hampton, who vowed to do his best to try to get the province to respond to these issues. I think what has to happen is some of the ministers who have charge over some of these issues need to give a serious response. I think the First Nation needs to hear that the issues are going to be addressed and not just sit on the backburner for years because thats whats happened with some
of these issues, added Hampton. Theyve been on the backburner for years, and the community wants to see if theres going to be a response. Thunder Bay-Rainy River MP John Rafferty hopes cooler heads will prevail when it comes to the planned toll booth. My overwhelming response to it is: lets get something done with all the levels of government, and I think the towns involved, too, so cooler heads can prevail, he remarked. Because once a toll booth goes up, or even an information picket, theres a danger that people on both sides will harden their views
and it will be more difficult to come to a conclusion that benefits everyone in the region. When asked what needs to be done prior to May 21, Rafferty called for the province to get into discussion mode when it comes to issues of the highway. And quite frankly, we have to have some fast action from Health Canada on the rehabilitation of the old mill site, he stressed. Ive seen reports, Ive seen a couple of different reports on the contamination, and quite frankly, I dont know why we havent had any firm action yet. My initial reaction is: why are Please see Serious, A10
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Deer control plan Workplace literacy focus at airport submitted of new Transition Centre for MNR approval
By Duane Hicks Staff writer By Duane Hicks Staff writer The Town of Fort Frances has applied for funding under Transport Canadas Capital Assistance Program for perimeter fencing to keep deer away from the airport. But if the town doesnt receive funding for the 5,800-metre long, eight-foot high, specially-designed fixed-knot fence, which would cost about $300,000, airport superintendent Bill Caul said Friday he has developed an action plan for this year, which he submitted last week to the Ministry of Natural Resources for approval. The action plan is as follows: The town will apply to the MNR to have a deer harassment permit in place by July 1 in order to install motion detection noise equipment at the main deer trails near the airport. The equipment will be supplied by the MNR. By Aug. 1, the town will have applied to have a deer removal permit in place so the town can implement a cull if and when deer become a major concern to aircraft. They will use the Fort Frances Sportsmens Club, which has volunteered its members to bow hunt the deer for the cull. The culling area will be expanded to include the rock ridges to the north of the runway. The town also will allow Fort Frances Sportsmens Club members to hunt on airport property during bow hunting season in October. Bow hunters will have to follow procedures established by the town to ensure safe activities on the airport. A public meeting was held March 30 at the airport to gain input regarding the deer problem there. The sportsmens club suggested the archery cull, which has been conducted at airports elsewhere to good effect. At that time, Caul said the Fort Frances Airport has been experiencing problems due to the increasing deer population, adding 2009 was the worst year for deer Please see Deer, A10 The new NCDS Transition Centre held its grand opening here Friday, and the staff want the public to know theyre ready to assist unemployed and laid-off workers, the under-employed, those preparing to write apprenticeship or GED exams, or others hoping to return to post-secondary training to get the skills they need. Centre manager/co-ordinator Cathy Emes said the need for a transition centre has been evident for some time, and identified both locally and provincially. Emes recalled theres been two local Business Retention and Expansion studies conducted in the past five years. In both of them, employers asked for something like this for their staff, and now we have that, she noted. As well, dozens of representatives from various agencies attended a regional planning meeting organized by NCDS last July, and at that time also identified the need for workshops and training available both during the day and in the evening. Then in February, NCDS was
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awarded a $403,000 contract by the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities to improve local accessibility and training focusing on the needs of employers and individuals who wish to improve workplace and essential skills. The Workforce Literacy and Essential Skills programone of 33 in Ontarioreflects the ministrys vision of establishing Ontarians as the most-educated people and highly-skilled workforce in North America. We really, really need a program like this because it is a stepping stone for people who really have no clue what they want to do, but theyre not college ready, said Mike Anderson, president of the NCDS board of directors. Its more than just literacy, he stressed. Theres a life skills component, theres computers. Its going to give them a clearer vision and direction, and get them to that point where they say, I want to finish high school to become Aget them to a point where theyre going to know what they want to do with their life, Anderson added. Emes clarified the NCDS Transition Centre (located at 242 Scott Please see Workplace, A10
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Fine Line Art Gallery co-op member Jean Richards decided where to display this Turbo Beaver, which Ray Cameron made of black and gold wire, in anticipation of the opening of its spring art show, Go for Gold, starting with a mix-and-mingle tomorrow (May 6) from 6:30-9 Duane Hicks photo p.m.
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way is still a go for this Friday at noon. For now, the band was to begin a traffic slowdown today (Wednesday), where information will be handed out to passing vehicles outlining Couchichings reasoning for setting up the toll booth, which includes what it sees as a failure to be properly compensated for the land Highway #11 is built upon and failure to remedy the soil contamination from the former J.A. Mathieu sawmill where six residences now sit. Since first announcing in late April its intentions to set up the
toll booth, the provinces only offer to the community was from the province to put up some street signs, street lights, and possibly a bike path along Highway #11, noted Couchiching Chief Chuck McPherson. Those were maybesthose werent definite offers, echoed Coun. Eugene McPherson. Just today [Tuesday], we got a call from the deputy ministers office asking if wed like to have some serious discussionsthat begs the question, what were the discussions before, if they werent serious? wondered Chief McPherson.
Meanwhile, there has been little to no response from Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, the pair noted. The only response or communication received from the federal ministers office was that [local MP] John Rafferty [who] had sent two letters, along with Diane Kelly, the chief of Grand Council Treaty #3, asking Minister Strahl to convene a meeting with my council and myselfand they acknowledged that they received those letters, Chief McPherson said. Other than that acknowledgement, nothing.
Meanwhile, the fee structure for the toll booth was approved at a band council meeting last night. Councillors opted to set the toll at $1 per passenger vehicle and $10 for commercial vehicles, with tolls to be collected for those travelling in both directions. Monthly passes also will be available for $25 for passenger vehicles and $100 for commercial ones. Passes can be purchased at the C&C Complex and Great Bear, and tomorrow will be sold at the Couchiching multi-use facility. All emergency vehicles, such as Please see Band, A5
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Alyssa Chiasson, front, Kaitlyn Chiasson, Mikayla Chiasson, and their uncle, John Storm, climbed the stairs of the relocated and refurbished lookout tower here Saturday. The tower, Hallett, and Sorting Gap Marina all opened for the season on Friday, and so far have been quite popular. Duane Hicks photo
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Representatives from member bands of the Fort Frances Chiefs Secretariat, along with Rainy River Resources CEO Raymond Threlkeld (second from right), signed a memorandum of understanding Thursday afternoon concerning First Nations inPeggy Revell photo volvement with the companys gold exploration in the Blackhawk region.
Alice Cupp and Talon Cantor checked out the galley in the Hallett on Saturday. Whether it is the engine room or the captains cabin, all areas of the ship are open for people to see.
Duane Hicks photos
The Sorting Gap, as well as the Hallett and tower sites, are open daily from 9 a.m.-8 p.m. (depending on weather). Children under 14 must be accompanied by a caregiver age 16 or older. Appropriate footwear is required. Visitors also are asked to take care and use caution as surfaces are uneven and platforms are steep and high. The Fort Frances Museum, meanwhile, is open daily from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. until Oct. 10 (hours subject to change). In related news, a multi-day celebration is planned in conjunction with Tourism Week to mark the grand opening of Phase II of the Heritage Tourism Project. On Friday, June 4, there will be a reception at the Ontario Tourism Information Centre at 10 a.m., followed by a walk down the wayfinding route (from the border to the waterfront via Victoria Avenue. This will be followed by a grandopening ceremony at the lookout tower at noon, followed by an international tug-of-war at 12:30 p.m. and a Fun in the Sun fundraiser barbecue. Also at the waterfront, Fred Scheers Lumberjack Shows will perform at 1 p.m., 4 p.m., and 7 p.m., featuring log-rolling, cross-cut sawing, pole-climbing, axe-throw-
The lookout tower is now open to visitors, providing an opportunity for people to get a scenic view of the waterfrontand a little exercise.
ing, and more. Back on Scott Street, a new exhibit at the museum focusing on lumber camps will open while work by local artists will be on display at downtown businesses. There also will be art activities at the museum, coinciding with a visit from Community Arts and Heritage Education Program coordinator Lila Cano. Museum curator Pam Cain said other groups interested in holding events during the celebration should let her know by calling 274-7891 or e-mailing pcain@ fort-frances.com Then the annul fly-in, drive-in barbecue is slated for Saturday, June 5 at the Fort Frances Airport. At the museum, there will be a workshop about grant writing with Cano on Saturday morning, followed by some sort of event to further promote the What Hooks You Here? rug-hooking project. Finally, an afternoon paddle on the upper river is scheduled for Sunday, June 6. Residents are invited to come out with their canoes and paddles (the town also will have a limited supply of them available through the recreation program). For more information, contact the Fort Frances Museum at 2747891 or via e-mail at ffmuseum@ fort-frances.com
INSIDE
Couchiching First Nation has received everything from praise to threats after following through on its controversial plan to set up a toll booth on Highway #11 at the west end of the Noden Causeway late Friday afternoon. Weve had a number of wellwishers. Some people said that we should have done this a long time ago. Some people actually gave tips, said Chief Chuck McPherson, referring to the response from mo-
torists who have passed through the toll booth, which the band says will stay up until the federal and provincial governments adequately address compensation for the land Highway #11 sits upon and the identified contaminated soil at the former J.A. Mathieu sawmill site. But on the other side of the coin, weve had people that have made a number of derogatory remarks, mostly racist in nature, noted Chief McPherson. And I had hoped that it wouldnt get to that point of bringing race into it, he added, admitting that
while that is their freedom of speech, he would hope people could express their disagreement in a more civil nature. If theres any violence, its not going to be started by the membership of Couchiching, Chief McPherson vowed, recounting how at one point a person had suggested bringing in warrior societies and council replied that if that happened, they would remove the booth themselves. Because thats not what were looking for, he stressed. Im disappointed that some
people have to make threatening remarks, racist remarks, because when all is said and done, were not going anywhere, were going to continue to live here. The people of Fort Frances are going to continue to live here, and we have to get along. Weve been telling [community members that] its not personal unfortunately, its based on this toll booth being here, to try as best you can not to internalize those things, to be strong, the cause is bigger than any one of us, said Coun. Sarah Mainville about how the
community is dealing with threats, and the supportive way the community has set up alongside the toll booth. I think that our resolve strengthens when we come here, she noted. Were using our spirituality a lot to strengthen what were doing. The older people here, the communication between the youth and the elders, its strengthening our resolve to continue, to fight for those things, those issues, to be resolved and negotiate a just settlement. Please see Toll, A5
Local trucker Scott Stafford stopped to speak with Holly Cogger, who was among the first to work at the Couchiching toll booth once it was set up late Friday afternoon on Highway #11 just west of the Noden Causeway. Some motorists, like Peggy Revell photo Stafford, have been refusing to pay the toll.
See story on B1
I dont see any benefit in the First Nations using the general public as fodder in their argument with the government. Scott Stafford
and the federal and provincial governments would have been made beforehand. Each time that weve [crossed], weve just handed over our loonie, and theyve been very polite and said thank you for that, she said. But after five trips and $10, she admitted she is upset and worried the toll booth will become a permanent fixture on the highway. The woman has decided she no longer will pay the toll, like other friends she has spoken to, although she added that having friends on Couchiching, she respects where the band members are coming from and are sympathetic to what has been happeningwhich is why she had paid the toll to begin with. I think the most important thing is that cooler heads prevail and that in the law, that they come to some agreement thats going to work for everybody, thats fair to everyone, she stressed. And fairs important, too, because they have to realize that there are limits to what can be demanded, too. I really wish they could in some lawful manner, within the law, get together and settle this, she continued. I am upset, and I think most of my friends and people out here [are, too], she noted encouraging the Couchiching chief and council to sit down and negotiation a settlement with government. It is harassment for the general public, and I think most people are feeling bullied by it, echoed Scott Stafford, a local logging truck operator who crosses the Noden Causeway about four times a day and 20 times a week. I know for sure if my wife was to drive through there, that she would really feel intimidated by it. Like, I dont think she would feel that she had enough strength or whatever to refuse paying the toll. Although he stops each time at the toll booth, Stafford said he has refused to pay so far. [Its] just on a matter of principle, he explained. I dont believe I should be paying twice to drive on a provincial highway when Ive already licensed my commercial vehicle to use that highway. Stafford noted this principle is the same even after the bands reduction of the commercial vehicle
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toll from $10 to $1 per crossing. I would just like the word spread to everybody that Im passing through unhindered without having to pay, he said, adding he wishes the band would be more upfront with the fact that they arent going to force people to pay. After passing through without paying the toll, Stafford admitted he has received a threatening anonymous phone call, which the OPP currently is investigating. But he still will be going through the toll booth without paying. If Im asked to pay $40 a day to do my [job], in my line of work, $40 a day is far more than what it costs to even feed my family, Stafford argued. Im a 32-year-old self-employed father of four, with a brand new mortgageweve just moved to the outskirts of Fort Frances to get closer to work, and now I see this as another obstacle that I have to deal with to support my family. I was hoping that reason would prevail, he said about his reaction when the toll booth first was announced. I dont see any benefit in the First Nations using the general public as fodder in their argument with the government. I dont see where they feel that that will gain anything as far as a neighbour relationship goesto use your neighbour as fodder in your argument doesnt seem right to me, he remarked.
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As the first vehicles went past the newly-erected toll booth late Friday afternoon, members of Couchiching Chief Chuck McPherson and Coun. Dan Mainville (not pictured) were the first Couchiching First Nation lined the side of Highway #11 to applaud those who opted to pay to step into the toll booth and start collecting tolls from passing vehicles late Friday afterthe $1 toll. Band members did not impede drivers who chose not to do so. noon.
Its an amazing community the community has really come together around [it]. Sarah Mainville
First Nation community, as well as within the Town of Fort Frances, to encourage respectful behaviour and fielding questions from the public. Our Community Services Officer is working to keep the flow of information current and timely to the media, and has been working to relay the messages to our community partners including our schools, businesses and service agencies, police added. As for how long the toll booth will be up, Chief McPherson said that it depends on how the province and federal government responds to the issues behind the bands decision to erect it. We hope to be making some headway, and Ill know later on in the week, he said, noting he and the provincial minister of aboriginal affairs will have a meeting tomorrow (May 27) concerning compensation for the land on which Highway #11 sits. Were going to see what they have to offer and weve got some ideas that were going to present to them, and well see how responsive they are, Chief McPherson said, adding that the band is looking for fair and adequate compensationsomething it hasnt received to date. When it comes to the contaminated soil at the former J.A. Mathieu sawmill site, Chief McPherson said hey have spoken with federal Indian Affairs minister Chuck Strahl, who has indicated that the study period is definitely over and its time for action. He didnt specify what the action is, cautioned Chief McPherson, but noted he also will be meeting with the regional director of INAC tomorrow and that Strahl has committed to meeting the band council the very near future. In terms of progression, were getting to talk to the people that make the decisions, and that looks favourable, said Chief McPherson. Since first going up late Friday afternoon, Chief McPherson, council, and members of the Couchiching community have taken turns manning the toll booth. Im doing it for my children and their children, and to protect our land that we haveits not very much and that worries me, Couchiching band member Daniel Morrisseau said Friday right before the toll booth went up. Morrisseau, a father of four, had volunteered to man the toll booth on Saturday morning. Fearits scary, he said about his feelings of the toll booth going up, noting that if arrested, it would be the first charge hes ever had laid against him, but hes doing it for the community. Its the first time weve ever done this as a community, and I dont know how its going to turn out, he admitted. I dont know how its going to turn out and I hope it turns out good, as peaceful as can be.
Two OPP officers handed out notices to participants Friday evening, warning them of possible criminal charges that could come if the toll booth continued. Peggy Revell photos
Grand Council Treaty #3 Ogichidaakwe Diane Kelly visited the site of Couchiching First Nations toll booth yesterday to offer her support and take a turn collecting tolls, as did NAN deputy grand chief Terry Waboose.
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