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FYI, we need to be careful with the information posted and view/opinions expressed since this may be monitored closely since CF assistance is now being heavily reviewed.

Canadian.Trucker said:FYI, we need to be careful with the information posted and view/opinions expressed since this may be monitored closely since CF assistance is now being heavily reviewed.
Jim Seggie said:And not to be disrespectful, but how do you know this?
Canadian.Trucker said:FYI, we need to be careful with the information posted and view/opinions expressed since this may be monitored closely since CF assistance is now being heavily reviewed.
That our opinions may be used somewhere? I don't.Jim Seggie said:And not to be disrespectful, but how do you know this?
Okay. All I was doing was just saying we should be cautious, that's all. No big deal.CDN Aviator said:We were all talking about Libya before the CF went.......we made out just fine.
Canadian.Trucker said:That the involvement of the CF is potentially being reviewed? I work with the Canadian Rangers.
Okay. All I was doing was just saying we should be cautious, that's all. No big deal.
Canadian.Trucker said:That our opinions may be used somewhere? I don't.
That the involvement of the CF is potentially being reviewed? I work with the Canadian Rangers.
Okay. All I was doing was just saying we should be cautious, that's all. No big deal.
Maybe that 90% should 'Occupy the Reserves' and live in tents to protest the inequality.Grimaldus said:...that the chiefs have million dollar houses and 90% of the community lives in shacks...
Thucydides said:Good find! Now where is the rest of the money?
ballz said:The person who's job it is to make sure these expenses are legit is the co-manager, who's salary is paid by the band and who is currently in a relationship with the chief, Theresa Spence.
New chief of Valley First Nation wants members to set her wage
December 10, 2011 - 4:37am BY GORDON DELANEY VALLEY BUREAU
CAMBRIDGE, Kings County — The newly elected chief of the Annapolis Valley First Nation is promising more transparency and accountability in her Mi’kmaq community.
Janette Peterson, 61, was elected Thursday, making her the first female chief in 30 years at the small reserve in Cambridge.
She replaces former chief Brian Toney, who had served in the position for 12 years. Peterson had 63 votes to Toney’s 26. There were 199 eligible voters among the 300 band members.
Peterson has been involved in politics for the past 40 years, and currently serves on the board of directors for the Native Women’s Association of Nova Scotia.
"I am really concerned with all the chiefs making these big salaries," Peterson said in an interview Friday. She was referring to the Canadian Taxpayer’s Federation releasing information earlier this year that showed some chiefs were making hundreds of thousands of dollars in salaries and expenses.
"In the new year, I will call a band meeting, where for the first time the band members will vote on what my wages should be," she promised.
"No more going in and taking this and that from the people," Peterson said. "I was elected by the people and I’m in here for the people, and it’s going to stay that way."
She also promised that all financial statements will be open to members of the band who wish to see them. "We’ve been in the dark too long," she said.
"I’m asking for the band membership to join me in making these changes, and what should happen on this reserve. This is their community and I’ll be relying on them."
She said her next big mandate will be creating jobs and applying for funding for special needs on the reserve, located between Kentville and Berwick. "I want the band run effectively and honestly."
Peterson ran unsuccessfully for chief the previous three terms, but said there was a strong desire for positive change in the community this time around.
"The people wanted change and they have spoken," she said. "And there are a lot of changes to be made."
( [email protected])
Bass ackwards said:From the article posted by Scott:
"Peterson had 63 votes to Toney’s 26. There were 199 eligible voters among the 300 band members."
89 votes from 199 eligible voters. Wow.
E.R. Campbell said:Yeah, that's terrible. Aboriginals vote for their local governments with about the same enthusiasm as people in Halifax, Winnipeg and Vancouver - 44.7% voter turnout.