Council Community Meeting Tonight

To better keep the community informed, the Council has scheduled an online community meeting for June 17, 2021, 7:00 PM.

Much of the work of the Council is divided up amongst standing committees that consider local and national issues of importance to our members. You can view the various committees and their members on the Chief and Council page.

The Council is bringing the membership together in this virtual meeting to update the community on the vital work of the committees to date. The Council is looking forward to sharing information with the members, taking questions and engaging with the audience.

Pre-registration is not required for this important meeting. Simply follow this link to attend. We hope to see you there!

You can also watch the stream live on our YouTube channel.

Date: June 17, 2021 – 7:00 PM
Pre-registration not required: Click here to enter the meeting during the scheduled time.

Neyaashiinimiing State of Emergency Extended

With the alarming rise of COVID-19 cases in Ontario, we are reminded that we remain in the grips of the pandemic. There is still no vaccine approved for COVID-19, nor is there an effective treatment. COVID-19 is a dangerous illness that is particularly risky for people with compromised immune systems or pre-existing health conditions.

In order to keep the Neyaashiinigmiing community safe, the Council has passed Motion 478 accepting the recommendation of the Community Emergency Response Group to extend the State of Emergency for Neyaashiinigmiing up to and including October 31, 2020.  The state of the pandemic and local conditions will be reassessed near the scheduled end of the State of Emergency to determine our next, best actions.

An Important Message to the Community from the Chief and Council

Our community has a drug problem. The abuse of drugs, particularly opioids, has become a crisis in our community and we are all deeply saddened by the number of drug overdoses and deaths Neyaashiinigmiing continues to suffer. We are all relations here, and we share equally the terrible pain of losing a loved one too soon. It wounds our souls and leaves us feeling empty and asking “why?” 

We do not blame the victims, neither those that have sadly passed, nor those that have happily survived the terrible, life-threatening consequences of drug abuse. We sincerely want to help drug users find their better path to living in a good way, and our many support programs stand ready to meet that need.

We have nothing but disgust and anger for the drug traffickers, however. These are criminals that are supplying potentially fatal illicit chemicals to our community. Drug traffickers are preying upon some of our most vulnerable residents for personal profit, without regard for the terrible harm drug abuse is inflicting on the community. They are enriching themselves by spreading poison throughout our home and risking the lives of our residents and relations. Drug traffickers have no place in Neyaashiinigmiing.

The Council is not in favour of telling people how to live their lives. Every individual is the person most responsible for his or her own actions, and the consequences of them. But when the lifestyle choices of some residents threaten harm to the health of the community, the Council is obliged to take strong action to protect our people – and we will.

The Council, in collaboration with our legal counsel, has prepared a draft Drug Trafficking By-law for consideration. Under the proposed by-law, convicted drug traffickers will be removed from the community and banned for a length of time proportionate to the seriousness of their conviction. This will remove a festering source of illness in Neyaashiinigmiing, and immediately improve the health and safety of our community. It is imperative that we act quickly, and also that we are both firm and fair to all residents and members. Persons removed from the community under the by-law will have an avenue to fairly appeal the decision to the Council.

The proposed by-law is available to the membership for review and we need your input. We invite every member to submit feedback on the proposed by-law in writing. The deadline for feedback will be September 16, 2020, 12:00 PM.

This is not a complete solution, and nobody, least of all the Council, believes it to be one. If we have any hope of healing our community, it must be in joining together as relations, friends and neighbours to push this scourge out of our home Neyaashiinigmiing. Staying silent as the people we know and love are exploited by drug traffickers gets us nowhere. The Council is calling upon all residents to speak up when you know something is wrong. 

If you know, or have good reason to believe, that someone is drug trafficking, please, for the sake of all of us, inform  the Nawash Police Service at 519-534-1233. If you have concerns about your safety or privacy, you can also leave an anonymous tip for the police at 519-534-5122. 

Help us keep our community safe for every generation!

Chi-Miigwech!

State of Emergency for Neyaashiinigmiing Extended

After reviewing available data and discussing present circumstances with Dr. Arra, the Grey Bruce Medical Officer of Health, the Council has accepted the recommendation of the Community Emergency Response Group to extend the State of Emergency for Neyaashiinigmiing until September 1, 2020.  We are gradually moving toward a full re-opening of the community, but we will only do so in alignment with the Council’s strategy of phased re-opening with significant monitoring of the effect of each phase on the health of the community.

Recent steps to begin the re-opening started with seasonal campers and registered leaseholders because these smaller, well-defined groups can be easily monitored for compliance with safety protocols. It would be irresponsible at this point in the pandemic to open up the community widely, with no practical way to assess if the large number of visitors we might expect are behaving in a safe manner. The Council will not risk the health of Neyaashiinigmiing residents by removing the monitors or access restrictions in haste, or without clear medical and operational guidance that it can be done safely.

The State of Emergency allows the Council to take the extraordinary actions required to manage our interests in the unprecedented circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Council will reassess the need for the State of Emergency again in the week before the current expiry date of September 1, 2020. We are grateful for your continued patience and support and look forward to returning the community to some normalcy in the days to come.