First Nations, regional district in B.C. working together to restore diverted river
A British Columbia regional district and three neighbouring First Nations have agreed to work together to restore a river that has been diverted for the last 70 years in order to generate hydroelectricity for aluminum smelting and the province’s power grid.
The Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako and the Nadleh Whuten, Saik’uz and Stellat’en First Nations formalized their partnership to improve the health of the Nechako River in a memorandum of understanding signed this fall.
The agreement comes as two of the nations are also waiting for a court ruling on a petition first filed in 2011 seeking an order that would require the restoration of the Nechako and its fisheries. The hearings began in the fall of 2019 and finished last spring.
The Nechako, among the major tributaries of the Fraser River, runs through the town of Vanderhoof in B.C.’s central Interior.