- Reaction score
- 3,100
- Points
- 1,160
Yes, but it makes us fatties feel like we're doing something to mitigate the 9 piece family meal and quart of slaw from KFC.
Crantor said:Pandora, I get the jist of what you are saying. But...
Assimilate is really the wrong word to use. I assume you meant integrate.
Not trying to patronise you or anything.
Scott said:Just today the CP did a story about the boyfriend's financial woes and the fact that he has zero education to back up his claims of being a financialmanagermangler.
Band co-manager Clayton Kennedy managed Attawapiskat's finances from 2001 through 2004, and was rehired in July, 2010.
In the five years he was not with the band, he said, things became “a financial nightmare.” He believes the first nation was in over its head.
“It wasn't so much people pocketing money, or flying to Bermuda,” he said. “It was more, too many trips to Timmins and too many workshops.” The band also hired too many staff, even at the risk of running a deficit, he said. This resulted in young, inexperienced workers “occupying positions, even when they were not capable of doing the job.” Attawapiskat has an unemployment rate of more than 60 per cent, and “there was a mentality to hire as many people as possible in order to get money on the table, so people could buy food and get off welfare.”
In January, Mr. Kennedy implemented a new remedial management plan, drastically changing the way business was conducted. Mr. Kennedy has residents paying for rent, water, sewer, garbage and electrical fees, something that was not well managed previously.
Ms. Tomagatik struggled with English, continually breaking into Cree then catching herself and searching for words. She said De Beers officials met with her family three times, long before the company cut a deal with Attawapiskat. She claimed that the company offered her and her four siblings $10,000 a year while the mine was in operation and that she has the paperwork to prove it. For the first few years, the money materialized. Ms. Tomagatik used it to support her daughter, living down south in Timmins. But several years ago, the payments stopped.
Tom Ormsby, the company's director of corporate affairs, explained that the rules changed when De Beers signed a deal with Attawapiskat to develop the land. Instead of making payments to individual band members, the money goes to chief and council.
“We don't compensate individuals,” said Mr. Ormsby, who began working for De Beers after the meetings with the Tomagatiks took place. “We have no way of knowing people's traditional hunting grounds and things like that. And we don't designate what the money's for, whether it's for the Tomagatiks or anybody. That's for the chief and council to decide.”
Strike said:The banner image for today's issue of the Kingston Whig Standard was an INM protest. Then, above the fold, is a photo of a new A/SLt and one of the first to participate in the ALOY program at RMC with an article. Thankfully the Whig did not sully this woman's accomplishments by throwing in comparisons or comments on the current political unrest.
Supposedly there were 8 grads in this first group by the way.
Brihard said:Too many chiefs, not enough indians?