Meeting First Nations on their own ground would be impactful in encouraging leaders who care about the future of their people to speak out against those who do not

The year was 2015. We gathered in the meeting house of the remote Tl’azt’en First Nation at Tache, 215 kilometres northwest of Prince George, B.C. I was there as volunteer chair of the British Columbia Industry Training Authority (ITA), the organization responsible for funding and facilitating trades training in the province. Accompanying me were the ITA CEO and other board members, who shared a passion for our dual mission of helping young people gain rewarding careers in the trades, while also providing the skills needed to carry out virtually every public and private project in the province.

One of those board members was LNG Canada CEO Andy Calitz, a South African engineer who had led LNG projects around the world. It was Calitz’s leadership and determination that would make the largest industrial project in Canadian history a reality. The natural gas for this project would be transported from land-locked northeast B.C. gas fields through the Coastal GasLink Pipeline, creating opportunities for the Tl’azt’en and other First Nations members along its route to learn a trade. But we faced a dilemma. Many young people from those remote villages lacked the academic qualifications normally required to enter trades training. After wrestling with that dilemma, the ITA board decided to create an entirely new certified trade called “construction craft worker.” Trainees would receive the knowledge needed to work safely as labourers as they learned the skills needed for more advanced trades.

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At the invitation of the Tl’azt’en chief and councillors, we came to discuss our construction craft worker initiative. The chief offered a traditional welcome and I respectfully responded, describing our mission. Then came a memorable feast of bear, beaver, deer, elk and moose, along with fish from the nearby lake.

It turned out to be an emotional day for all. The chief was near tears as he told us that, while they hear many leaders’ statements from afar aimed at First Nations, we were the first group of leaders to honour his people by travelling to their village. That meant more to the chief and council than we could have imagined. The many young band members in attendance expressed their hope that working on the pipeline might help them gain the trade qualifications they needed to gain employment afterwards.

Given their remote location, our board knew the Coastal GasLink Pipeline would be their only chance in a generation to achieve that. The arduous process of gaining approval for the LNG project took much longer than expected but finally, five years after our meeting, the gas supply pipeline is under construction. And 20 First Nations along the route have signed agreements that offer, not only an offer of employment opportunities, but also financial benefits that will help lift their community out of poverty.

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Who could have imagined that this long-awaited dream would turn into a national nightmare because of opposition by the unelected hereditary chiefs of just one of those 20 First Nations? And that this single intra-First Nation jurisdictional dispute could spawn illegal blockades disrupting railways, roads and international commerce across our entire nation? I’m sure most Canadians were as dismayed as I was to see ministers of the Crown meekly asking for “permission” to enter an unlawfully occupied site to “dialogue” with a disparate agglomeration of protesters opposed to virtually everything that we value about our country.

There have been many times over the years when I’ve witnessed people who keep trying to change the behaviour of an impossibly intransigent opponent, rather than going around them to engage supporters. In this case, the way to do that is breathtakingly obvious. There are 20 First Nations who, just like the Tl’azt’en, are counting on the Coastal GasLink to help lift them out of poverty and provide opportunities for their young people gain employable skills. If I were prime minister, my cabinet ministers would be on their way immediately to each of those 20 First Nations to solicit their help in making sure the pipeline gets built.

My experience in that Tl’azt’en meeting house shows that ministers from our national government coming to meet First Nations on their own ground would be profoundly impactful in encouraging First Nations leaders who actually care about the future of their people to speak out against those who do not.

Financial Post

Gwyn Morgan is a retired business leader who has been a director of five global corporations.