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Lockport, MB October 2022;
One Basin, One Governance Final Report Release and New Signage Unveiling;

OBOG Report Release.HEIC

The One Basin, One Governance Final Report focuses on the need of First Nations playing a stronger role in water governance. The report was constructed with the input from First Nation Communities across the Lake Winnipeg Basin, Southern Chiefs' Organization, Peguis First Nation and the Red River Basin Commission.
 
The message is clear, First Nations want to be part of the decision-making process when it comes to water governance. See below for this report. 

New signage will be going up throughout the Red River North region. The signs will inform residents and fishers that they are on Peguis traditional lands and they ask to help keep them clean. The signs are a partnership between Peguis First Nation, Red River Operation Clean Up and the RRBC North Chapter.

Water is life

Water is sacred 

Water for all: working toward an inclusive water governance model

Winnipeg is located within Treaty No. 1 Territory, the traditional lands of the Anishinabe (Ojibway), Ininew (Cree),   Oji-Cree, Dene, and Dakota, Birthplace of the Métis Nation and the Heart of the Métis Nation Homeland

Indigenous communities, within the Lake Winnipeg Basin area, have unique perspectives and different experiences surrounding water quality and water management. 

We believe in the critical importance of partnering with First Nations and Tribal communities

to share perspectives and work on common goals. 

​

Good water governance needs Indigenous values at the table!

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One Basin, One Governance Final Report - Released October 2022;

OBOG Final Report: Water Governance Lake Wpg Basin
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"Peguis First Nation and Partners Move Toward a Stronger Water Governance"

News Announcement and One Basin, One Governance Report Release

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UPDATE

Thank you for Attending! The conference has been a huge success!
We are continuing the conversation!

During the conference, a clear message emerged;

good water governance

needs Indigenous values at the table.

​

  During her presentation and while speaking about partnerships for water governance,

  Chief Lorraine Cobiness, Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation, stated;

  "When we have these relationships,

  we will see great success.

  And you will not do this without us.

  It will not happen without us.

  We need to do this together!"

​

We need a watershed governance plan that includes us all. 

SUCCESSFUL BEGINNINGS; 

In January 2018, the Southern Chiefs’ Organization with the Red River Basin Commission called upon Indigenous and other Government Leaders to join them in a discussion of water rights within Manitoba, we called this event the “Spirit of Water”. The success of this day created direction to call upon all leaders of the Lake Winnipeg Basin to come together to speak for all, as

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PRESENTERS & CONFERENCE VIDEOS

PRESENTERS & CONFERENCE VIDEOS

Presenters and Presentations of 2019 One Basin One Governance Conference

Opening Prayer - Chief Arvol Looking Horse

RRBC, Vice Chair - Gavin van der Linde

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Grand Chief

Jerry Daniels

Southern Chiefs' Organization Inc.

Jerry Daniels is the Grand Chief of the Southern Chiefs’ Organization, representing 34 communities in Southern Manitoba. He is a proud member of Long Plain First Nation. More info

Grand Chief Jerry Daniels

Chief Lee Crowchild from Tsuut'ina First Nation

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Xakiji Lee Crowchild

Chief
Tsuutina Nation

Xakiji Lee Crowchild is the third generation Xakiji following in the footsteps of his father, former Xakiji Gordon Crowchild and his grandfather, former Xakiji David Crowchild whom Crowchild Trail is named after.More info

Councillor Jeff Browaty - City of Winnipeg

Minister of Indigenous and Northern Relations - 

Hon. Eileen Clarke

Chief Arvol Looking Horse

Jeff Betgar - Manitoba Hydro

Councillor Mario Swampy - Samson Cree Nation

Rosey Radmanovich - First Nations TSAG

Elder Dave Courchene

Bob Sandford

Anthony Johnston, Katherine Finn and Maria Mora

Maria Mora

MP Terry Duguid

Dr. Colin Whitfield

Dr. Richard Grosshans - IISD

Dr Gordon Goldsborough, University of Manitoba

Chief Lorraine Cobiness - Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation

 Christa Monette, TMBCI Water Commissioner

 Tina Keeper

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Tina Keeper

Norway House

Cree Nation

Tina currently is with the Southern Chiefs’ Organization in Environment Research. She is known for the television series "North of 60", and for serving as a Member of Parliament for the federal riding of Churchill. More info

Elder Daniels - Prayer

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Chief Arvol Looking Horse

Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe
Cheyenne River Reservation,South Dakota

Arvol Looking Horse was born on the Cheyenne River Reservation in South Dakota. At the age of 12, he was given the responsibility of... More info

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Bob Sandford

Water Security Chair - United Nations University

He is also lead author of "Canada in the Global World", a new United Nations expert report examining the capacity of Canada’s water sector to meet and help others meet the United Nations 2030 Transforming Our World water-related Sustainable Development Goals. More info

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Anthony Blair Dreaver Johnston

Mistawasis Nêhiyawak

"I am from and work for Mistawasis. I aspire to be Nêhiyawak.” 

Anthony is a member of and works for his Nation, Mistawasis Nêhiyawak, a Cree community north of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. More info

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Dr. Colin Whitfield

School of Environment and Sustainability

Colin Whitfield is an Assistant Professor in the School of Environment and Sustainability and the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan. More info

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Denis Paquette and

Carmen Henriquez

Producers and Filmmakers

Carmen and Denis are the producers of Native Planet. Their interests are focused on themes of environmental, economic and social justice. More info

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Simon Baker

Host of Native Planet

Born and raised on the Squamish Nation in North Vancouver, B.C., at the tender age of twenty-five, host Simon Baker is already an accomplished screen actor with numerous credits on Canadian TV series and American feature films. More info

ONE BASIN ONE GOVERNANCE

September 16 - 18, 2019 Winnipeg - MB

A Three Day Conference was held consisting of a Fresh Water Fish Marketing Corporation Tour,

Welcome Reception with Special Presenters,

Two full days of presentations from leaders across the Lake Winnipeg basin and a

Banquet which was honoured to celebrate the Southern Chief's Organization's 20th Anniversary!

Indigenous Water Ceremony

THE NETLEY-LIBAU

MARSH

 

For further info,

please visit https://www.savenetleymarsh.com

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Our Indigenous communities, within the Lake Winnipeg Basin area, have unique perspectives and different experiences surrounding water quality and water management. As we understand, water is sacred.
 The RRBC believes in the critical importance

of partnering with First Nations and Tribal communities

to share perspectives and work on common goals.

The Netley-Libau Marsh is the largest coastal wetland in North America and a critical fish, wildlife and waterfowl habitat area for Lake Winnipeg. This marsh has deteriorated due to a number of primarily anthropogenic factors (caused or influenced by humans) to the point where it is no longer a healthy, functional wetland. Healthy marshes can help filter out nutrient and toxins and improve water quality.

THE MARSH

Related Videos & Information

She is the teen fighting to protect Canada's water — meet 13-year-old Canadian Autumn Peltier. She speaks bravely, confidently and passionately, and as a so-called water walker, Peltier pleaded with Justin Trudeau to protect Canada’s water. Now she is gearing up to speak at the United Nations for World Water Day.

Following the birth of a White Buffalo Calf in 1994, the 19th Generation Keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe of the Lakota, Dakota & Nakota Nations— Chief Arvol Looking Horse, was directed to honor the Four Directions with ceremony on Summer Solstice/June 21st.  

According to Lakota prophecy, the birth of “Miracle,” a female white buffalo, signaled a time of Earth changes and the coming of The Mending of the Hoop of all Nations.  The Summer Solstice is said to be a powerful time to pray for peace and harmony among all Living Beings. 

Chief Looking Horse believes that this day of collective prayer will create an energy shift to heal the earth and achieve a universal consciousness toward obtaining peace.  He believes that it is time all people understand Mother Earth is the Source of life, not a resource.
 

Native Planet
Saving Lake Winnipeg

First Nations chiefs declare climate emergency on Day 1 of AFN annual assembly

For decades, fertilizers from agricultural production, sewage and commercial phosphates have flowed into Lake Winnipeg, creating huge algae blooms that are sucking the life out of its water.

As government, scientific and business leaders sound the alarm for Lake Winnipeg, indigenous knowledge may hold the key to its survival. Learn More.

First Nations leaders from across Canada passed a resolution declaring a "global climate emergency" on Tuesday, as environmental concerns took priority on the opening day of the 40th annual general meeting of the Assembly of First Nations in Fredericton on Tuesday. Learn More.

Caleb Behn an Ech-cho Dene and Dunne-Za from Treaty Eight, executive director of Keepers of the Water, speaks about ideas of Indigenous law and water governance for Canada. Proposing the idea of Dene law and understanding for water as a system of kinship from which all peoples using the legal infrastructures to employ protections to these systems the way we do peoples. Equating grandfathers of wisdom and knowledge to glaciers holding past climate data, and great lakes as elder grandmothers who require elder protections as they are vulnerable and we are losing them at an enormous rate, and protecting small rivers and tributaries as we would a child allowing them to develop into functioning adults. In sum he transposes Dene ideas of family law onto our relationships with water.

SOURCE: CBC.CA

Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. 10th largest lake in the world. 2011. The Nature of Things reveals how a perfect storm of agriculture, hydro practices, sewage run-off, flooding and marsh destruction has devastated Lake Winnipeg.

Researchers from across the country and around the world gathered in Hamilton and Six Nations of the Grand River for the Global Water Futures Inaugural Annual Science Meeting, June 3 - 6, 2018. The meeting was jointly hosted by McMaster University and Six Nations and was attended by over 350 delegates -- focusing on the co-creation of Indigenous and scientific research. This meeting is believed to be the first major science gathering on a First Nation in Canada.

The video is part of a one-year collaborative Indigenous knowledge mobilization research project initiated in May 2016 titled Spirit, Safety and a Stand-off, led by Bharadwaj and funded by the Water, Economics, Policy, and Governance Network (WEPGN) at Brock University.

Where is Your Watershed (Lake Winnipeg - Manitoba)

Do you have your facts straight about your local watershed? Many Manitobans live in an area that is beautiful, diverse and an environment we should all know about.

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Global Water Futures funds more water-quality research at Six Nations

SOURCE: McMaster University

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SOURCE: CANADA.CA

Phosphorus and nitrogen are essential plant nutrients. When phosphorus or nitrogen levels are too high or too low, they can have harmful impacts on the food web of a lake or river. They are a measure of the health of Lake Winnipeg and its surrounding watershed. These indicators provide the status of phosphorus and nitrogen levels in Lake Winnipeg and 3 of its tributary rivers. LEARN MORE

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First Nations Partnership for

Ecosystem Repair of Alouette River

SOURCE: Watercanada.net

Global Water Futures is funding a new research collaboration between McMaster researchers and traditional knowledge holders on Six Nations of the Grand River that focuses on addressing water-related issues of training, wellness and resilience and governance. LEARN MORE

The new Alouette River Ecosystem Partnership (AREP) was recently created to improve the water resource management of the Alouette River and surrounding ecosystems in Maple Ridge, British Columbia. The partnership is made up of the Katzie and Kwantlen First Nations, the City of Maple Ridge, and the non-profit environmental organization Alouette River Management Society. LEARN MORE

SUPPORTING PARTNERS

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