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Minister forced to intervene in Grassy road dispute

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In Indigenous
Jun 3rd, 2011
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MNR flooded with calls from supporters of Anishinabe rights
From Grassy Narrows Asubpeeschoseewagong Anishinabek June 1 2011
Thanks for supporting Grassy Narrows’ efforts to assert their land rights and self-determination on their territory.  The Ministry of Natural Resources was flooded with calls and they have started back-pedalling fast.  Here is the latest on the situation:
1.  The government used a helicopter to fly over the grassroots road block and threatened the workers with fines and seizing of machinery if the work is not stopped. 
2.  Under increasing pressure and public scrutiny the Minister of Natural Resources was forced to step in to try to resolve the conflict.
3.  After two years of MNR refusals the minister has committed to repairing the bridge in a timely manner at their own expense, and to not levy fines for the work already done without permits.
4.  Grassy Narrows people continue to assert that they have a right to make decisions about their territory.
5.  The grassroots women are back out there today to assert Grassy Narrows jurisdiction.  They believe that Grassy Narrows people should complete the work themselves, under their own authority.
You support is making a big difference in pressuring the government, and in keeping the grassroots women feeling safe blockading remote roads.  Please continue to watch this situation closely and to support Indigenous sovereignty.  
To learn more about Grassy Narrows and to sign up for updates please go to:
FreeGrassy.org 
Dispute flares over road work
Minister steps in to resolve issue
JON THOMPSON
Miner and News
The Minister of Natural Resources stepped in Wednesday morning to douse a flare in the conflict between her local ministry staff and Grassy Narrows First Nation.
Less than 24 hours prior, local MNR officials leapt a road blockade in a helicopter to demand a company contracted by Grassy Narrows stop work on a bridge embankment, which had washed out and severed an dirt road leading to Red Lake the community said it required for emergency evacuation. The alternate road was last used a decade ago when a bridge on the Jones Road leading to the First Nation was washed out.
Grassy Narrows leaders said the ministry threatened to charge the company $10,000 and seize heavy equipment for fixing a washout on a bridge. Deputy chief Randy Fobister said Grassy had met with the ministry four or five times to attempt to get the washout fixed, which has left the road out of commission for two years. In those meetings, he claimed the ministry would not grant a work permit unless the First Nation agreed to for forestry use of the road.
Frustrated with the response, the band contracted Nor-Quip Construction to repair the bridge and women from the community blockaded the road at its western entrance.
On Wednesday morning, Minister Linda Jeffrey held a conference call with the leadership of Grassy Narrows and committed her ministry to repairing the bridge in a “timely manner” at no cost to the First Nation. A spokesman for Jeffrey promised no fine would be laid against the construction company, nor would its assets be expropriated for Tuesday’s action. Fobister said Wednesday’s work will be ensuring those commitments are met as the leadership of the First Nation deals directly with the minister’s office.
“The way I see it, it’s communication,” he reflected. “They try to deal with it locally but they don’t recognize that this is a serious issue. They don’t recognize that we’re a government. Our biggest issue is safety. They (local staff) just see we have to get a work permit. That’s what Linda Jeffrey sees. She sees the importance of the safety of our people. The smaller departments don’t see that. They need to see how First Nations governments are the same as them.”
Judy Da Silva is a Grassy Narrows mother and traditional healer who is still standing at the blockade among Grassy Narrows women.
“We’re still going to be out there and we’ll be monitoring the situation until we can make sure it’s completed,” she said.
Group prevents MNR from halting repair work in Grassy Narrows
TbNewsWatch.com – 
By tbnewswatch.com MNR officials say a group of women from the Grassy Narrows area prevented them from halting repair work on a bridge on the Segeisse Road. The MNR has been threatening to levy large fines if the work isn’t stopped. …
Grassy Narrows women protecting bridge builders
Wawatay News – 
Three women from Grassy Narrows are currently blocking Ministry of Natural Resources staff from accessing Segeisse Road at Highway 671 in the community’s traditional territory. The women – Judy Da Silva, Chrissy Swain and Adrienne Swain – are blocking …
The story was also covered by CBC Radio Thunder Bay, Wawatay radio, and possibly APTN.
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