'We're going to be welcoming the world here,' Lennox Island chief says of new park funding - Action News
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'We're going to be welcoming the world here,' Lennox Island chief says of new park funding

The chief of Lennox Island First Nation is thrilled that this week's federal budget confirms money will be coming to turn a string of Islands off P.E.I.'s North Shore into Canada's next national park reserve.

Federal budget earmarks $71.9M for Pituamkek, plus economic development funding

Lennox Island Chief Darlene Bernard reacts to $72M fund for new national park

6 months ago
Duration 6:17
The federal budget, tabled Tuesday, emarks $71.9 million to establish Canada's 11th national park reserve at Pituamkek a chain of islands off northwestern P.E.I. that has great cultural significance to the Mi'kmaq. Lennox Island First Nation Chief Darlene Bernard worked to secure the money, and she spoke to CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin about what the national park designation means for her community.

The chief of Lennox Island First Nation is thrilled that this week's federal budget confirms money will be coming to turn a string of islands off Prince Edward Island's North Shore into Canada's next nationalpark reserve.

"We're moving forward in protecting something that's so sacred to us and so dear to us and that will have massive, massive, wonderful benefits as we move forward with it," Darlene Bernard told CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin on Wednesday.

"We're going to be creating employmentopportunities, opportunities for people to learn about our rich culture and our history.... We're going to be welcoming the world here and we're proud to do it."

Tuesday'sbudget included $71.9 million, to be spent over the next 12 years, to establish Canada's 11th national park reserve at Pituamkek, pronouncedbee-doo-um-gek.

The chain of islands making up Pituamkek runs from the mouth of Malpeque Bay up to Alberton, and includes Hog Island and Bird Island. The islands are a unique sandhill ecosystem, and of great cultural significance to the Mi'kmaq.

A drone view of the shoreline of one of the many sandy islands that make up Pituamkek.
A drone view of the shoreline of one of the many sandy islands that make up Pituamkek. (CBC)

"I think you'll see, like,transformativework being done with regard to tourism in western P.E.I.," Bernard said. "So it's not just ... great for us, it's great for all Islanders."

The federal government first announced an interest in turning the area into a national park reserve in 2019.

"Home to multiple archaeological sites, rare geological formations, and ceremonial lands, protecting Pituamkek means ensuring that the connection of the Mi'kmaq to these ancestral lands is protected and preserved," the budget documents said.

Map showing where natural park reserve will be located, stretching from the mouth of Malpeque Bay to Northport.
The Pituamkek national park reserve could stretch from the mouth of Malpeque Bay to Northport. (CBC)

The difference between a national park and a national park reserve is that there are unresolved claims of Indigenous rights in the area of the latter.Negotiationsaround what's referred to as the Hog Island Specific Claim dateback to 1996, over lands purchased in 1942.

The funding, which will start flowingthis fiscal year, includes $30.7 million in remaining amortization because the chain had to be bought from its former owners, and $7.5 million per year tocreate the nationalpark reserve and then operate it.

And it's not the only good news in the budget for First Nations like Bernard's.

Economic development projects also being funded

Funding for Indigenous peoples in Canada is a major focus of the budget, Atlantic Economic Council senior economist Lana Asafftold CBC News on Wednesday.

Head shot of Lana Asaff
Lana Asaff of the Atlantic Economic Council says Atlantic Canada could see $375 million in investment in the form of loan guarantees for economic development projects in Indigenous communities. (CBC)

The budget includes $9 billion over five years for reconciliation, education, health care, and self-governance.

The biggest slice of that is $5 billion to cover loan guarantees for economic development projects in Indigenous communities. Based on regionalpopulation statistics, the council estimates Atlantic Canada could see $375 million of that.

"This funding could be huge in terms of unlocking more opportunities to invest in clean energy projects in this region. We've seen some companies that have already started those partnerships with Indigenous communities and groups," said Asaff. "We hope to see this continue and this funding [will] help out with that."

With files from Kevin Yarr