You want t see how easy it is for wealthy native bands can have such poverty. They also have great wealthy too, but because they are so corrupt the money is not allowed to filter through and improve the lives of the masses.
Money won't solve problems Of any reserve in Canada, the Samson Cree Nation is a prime example of how money can't solve social problems.Quote
By The Calgary Herald April 20, 2008
Of any reserve in Canada, the Samson Cree Nation is a prime example of how money can't solve social problems.
The reserve, where 23-month-old Asia Saddleback was shot in the stomach when a gang bullet blasted into the kitchen wall, is one of the wealthiest in Canada. It sits atop a vast oil reserve that has netted Samson residents hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties. Samson Oil and Gas is a wholly aboriginal-owned company headquartered in Hobbema, whose mandate is "enhancing the wealth of its shareholder, Samson Cree Nation, and providing employment and opportunity to First Nations in the oil and gas sector." Among the reserve's investments, further generating community wealth, is St. Eugene's resort complex with golf and a casino in Cranbrook, B.C. The Nation's economic development department's goal is to "promote and facilitate the development of a strong and diversified economic and tourism base in our community."
Yet, the drug trade is flourishing, in part because of Hobbema's position as a route for drug supplies to Fort McMurray, and the area gang count is 13 -- this is with a combined population among four neighbouring reserves of just 12,000 people. Drive-by shootings like the one that left Asia with a bullet lodged permanently in her abdomen are commonplace. Two-thirds of calls to the Hobbema RCMP come from the Samson reserve.
Something is lacking here, and it's not money. What's missing is what money can't buy -- a sense of community and individual purpose.Because of the band's oil wealth, it's been customary for kids to receive payouts from trust funds to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars on their 18th birthdays. That's money they never had to work for. There's no reason or incentive for them to work or pursue an education,when the drug trade is so lucrative, when their trust funds are brimming with money and when they come from homes where high rates of alcoholism make their parents poor role models.
The RCMP can vow to step up policing, Indian Affairs can offer to help and Chief Marvin Yellowbird can declare the band council is "dedicated to the reduction of gang activity." But unless individuals work toward change in their own lives, nothing will be accomplished. There are models for change all around -- for one, there's the example set by Chief Clarence Louie of the thriving Osoyoos band in B.C., whose ground rule is that band members must be at work or at school; doing nothing is unacceptable.
Last year, Bryce Montour, then a Grade 8 student at Hobbema's Ermineskin Junior-Senior High School, wrote in a letter to the Herald about the social problems he sees around him: "The worst is the gangs; the gangs are killing each other. People are dying because of this; there are drive-bys, and people are drinking and driving." Classmate George Saddleback wrote: "(Our people) abuse themselves with gang violence and drug abuse."
Out of the mouths of babes comes the impetus for change; the cry needs to be taken up by the entire community, one individual at a time, until it becomes a roar.http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/theeditorialpage/story.html?id=e7ca8173-a63b-4311-9cd1-f65f385ac7c6"> http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/new ... 5f385ac7c6">http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/theeditorialpage/story.html?id=e7ca8173-a63b-4311-9cd1-f65f385ac7c6