Attawapiskat residents want Spence's help at home
Outstanding housing issues, transparency issues need to be dealt with, First Nation residents say
CBC News
Posted: Feb 4, 2013 9:11 AM ET
Last Updated: Feb 4, 2013 2:25 PM ET
Residents in Attawapiskat want Chief Theresa Spence to help fix the community's ongoing housing problems, now that she has finished her national protest which involved fasting in a teepee in Ottawa for several weeks. (Megan Thomas/CBC)
Related
Related Stories
From declaring a housing emergency last year, to a hunger protest in Ottawa, Attawapiskat Chief Theresa Spence has fought very publicly with the federal government — but some say she also needs to deal with issues back at home.
The hunger strike put the problems of Attawapiskat back in the national headlines, and near the end of Spence's hunger strike, the federal government released an unflattering audit that again had people questioning the reserve's financial management.
By the end, Attawapiskat's band council wanted Spence to call it quits, which she did — after aboriginal leaders and opposition politcians signed a declaration to fight for a number of issues, along with a better relationship with the federal government.
Mike Koostachin grew up in Attawapiskat but moved to Fort Albany because he says he was fed up with the way things were being run. (Megan Thomas/CBC)'Transparency issues'
Some people from Attawapiskat travelled with Spence to Ottawa to support her — and others even built a teepee in front of the band office like the one Spence was staying in on Victoria Island.
But being back in the national spotlight was frustrating for some Attawapiskat residents because they say more than the federal government is to blame for some of the problems in the community.
Mike Koostachin, a community member who recently moved to nearby Fort Albany, said he was frustrated with questionable hiring and management at the band office.
“There's transparency issues,” Koostachin said. “Accountability … all stuff to run a local government. You don't see it.”
Koostachin has since found work in Fort Albany, where he has opened a coffee shop.
Jackie Hookimaw-Witt said she will also call on Spence to work on internal issues. She said many in Attawapiskat are afraid to speak up because the band office has so much control over housing and jobs.
Hookimaw-Witt has a PhD, but said she is planning to leave because she has not be able to find work.
“She is the chief. She has to deal with these matters. She is not holy,” Hookimaw-Witt said.
“If there's outstanding issues, she needs to follow up from her administration to say what is going on.”
A notice in the band office said Spence will return to work this week, after making a medically supervised transition back to solid foods.
'Has to be confronted'
While driving down a snowy street in Attawapiskat, Hookimaw-Witt pointed out the home where her elderly parents used to live.
“It's still sitting there lonely, it's boarded up,” she said.
A sewer backup a few years ago forced them out, but the band never paid for repairs. Housing is in such short supply that the reserve declared a state of emergency last year.
“That's where you see how much is wrong in the community,” Hookimaw-Witt said.
“She knows how to take on the Prime Minister. Surely she can have that courage … to say, ‘listen, [we] can't have this anymore’.”
Hookimaw-Witt added many in Attawapiskat are afraid to speak up because band officials decide where people live and, sometimes, whether they get a job.
“The way they are operating … it's not right sometimes,” Koostachin said. “That has to be confronted. That's why we just want answers.”
Share Tools
Latest Thunder Bay News Headlines
- Northwest employers eye skilled immigrants for hire
- A northern Ontario non-profit group wants to make employers in the northwest aware of the pool of skilled immigrants in Canada looking for work. more »
- Thunder Bay pub to be 1st in Canada to offer pregnancy tests
- An organization dedicated to preventing Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder hopes to install pregnancy test dispensers in bar bathrooms across the country — and it's starting in Thunder Bay, Ont. more »
- Thunder Bay council spins wheels on bike lanes
- Thunder Bay city council's decision to delay a vote on proposed new bike lanes by a week could set the project back by a month. more »
- Half of First Nations children live in poverty
- Half of status First Nations children in Canada live in poverty, a troubling figure that jumps to nearly two-thirds in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, says a newly released report. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Obesity now recognized as a disease
- The American Medical Association has voted to recognize obesity as a disease, while doctors in Canada say they also treat it as such. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Washington's obsession with leakers
- Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are just the most prominent targets in an all-out legal and propaganda campaign that America's security apparatus is mounting against leakers everywhere, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
- Caregiving dads stigmatized at work suggests UofT study
- Fathers who participate in child rearing and housework are likely to be labeled slackers and "failed men" at work, according to a study spearheaded by researchers at the University of Toronto and Long Island University. Are active dads the norm at your workplace? more »
- Dozens of children seized from Manitoba Mennonite community
- Child welfare authorities have removed all but one child from a small Mennonite community in rural Manitoba. more »

