MR-125E
INDIAN RESERVES:
PROCEDURE FOR ADDING LAND
Prepared by
Peter Niemczak
Law and Government Division
14 November 1994
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
POLICY
SITE-SPECIFIC CONSIDERATIONS
A. General
B. Inter-Governmental
PROCEDURE
INDIAN RESERVES:
PROCEDURE FOR ADDING LAND
INTRODUCTION
These notes briefly discuss the current
government policy and procedures for adding land to some Indian reserves and for creating
others.
POLICY
Section 91 (24) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 provides the federal government with exclusive legislative jurisdiction over
"Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians." The federal Department of Indian
Affairs and Northern Development (DIAND) has used this authority to implement a policy on
adding land to existing Indian reserves and creating new ones. The policy states that a
proposal to allow such an expansion will be approved only if it meets one or more of the
following "policy justifications":
to meet an outstanding treaty
entitlement or specific land claim settlement obligation;
where a province offers land to a band;
the return of unsold surrendered land;
in exchange for expropriated land;
for social reasons;
for economic reasons;
for geographic reasons;
relocations due to national disasters or
restricted reserve development;
to provide landless band or communities
with a land base.
SITE-SPECIFIC
CONSIDERATIONS
Each proposal to create or add to a
reserve must also be evaluated according to several criteria identified by the Department
as site-specific considerations. These include general considerations and
inter-governmental considerations.
A. General
When possible, any additions to reserves
should be contiguous and reserve boundaries should follow natural waterways.
New reserve land must undergo an
environmental review as outlined in Part II of Chapter 9 of the Department's policy
manual. Land to be acquired may present environmental hazards including "buried
wastes, controlled substances, underground storage tanks, contaminated soil, surface and
groundwater pollution, process effluent discharge, water accumulation, soil gas
accumulation and toxic spills." Such environmental hazards, and the growing public
awareness and concern over environmental issues, have forced the Department to establish
environmental review procedures which must be followed before the Department acquires any
land either to add to an existing reserve or to create a new one.
Funding for the new reserve land must come
out of the existing approved departmental budget for the region in question. Proposals
that require funding from outside of this budget may be approved, but only in exceptional
cases.
A proposal for new reserve lands or the
creation of a new reserve must be shown to be cost-effective in relation to the number of
people who will benefit and in relation to the availability of suitable surplus federal
Crown land, the acquisition of provincial Crown land or private land, and the exchange of
existing reserve land for other, more suitable, land. The impact of the proposal on the
economic well-being of the band must be considered using such criteria as the long-term
business, employment and taxation potential.
Furthermore, the proposal must be examined
to determine the effects it will have on other federal departments. DIAND must receive
confirmation that any departments whose costs may be increased as a result of the new
reserve lands are able to assume these additional costs.
The title to the land should be as free as
possible of restrictions, restrictive covenants, reversionary rights and third party
rights. In addition, bands should be informed of whether or not title to mines and
minerals is included in the land added to a reserve.
The federal government must make
arrangements for public access to the new reserve lands and for occupants' access to
public utilities.
B.
Inter-Governmental
The federal Crown, when converting
non-reserve land into an Indian reserve, must consider whether or not it has the
jurisdiction to transfer the land. While the federal Crown clearly has the authority to
create Indian reserves on federal Crown land, it does not have the power to appropriate
provincial Crown land for that purpose. In such cases the cooperation of the provincial
government is essential.
Federal policy requires DIAND to consult
with the government of the province in which a reserve is to be established or enlarged to
assess the potential impact of the proposal on provincial programs and services.
Furthermore, the local government should be consulted if the created or expanded reserve
land is to be located within a municipality. These consultations would deal with the
municipality's loss of tax revenues, arrangements for the provision of, and payment for,
municipal services, the application and enforcement of municipal by-laws on the reserve,
and the establishment of a joint consultation process and a dispute resolution mechanism.
PROCEDURE
The process of creating a new Indian
reserve or adding to an existing one begins when the Indian band passes a Band Council
Resolution making this request. The DIAND regional officials analyze this Resolution to
ensure that it conforms with the policy justifications and site-specific considerations
discussed above. An environmental review of the proposal is begun at this stage.
The regional officials then prepare a
report and recommendations for the Regional Director General, who can reject the proposal,
approve it in principle, or, in certain other cases, prepare a recommendation for the
Assistant Deputy Minister of Lands, Revenue and Trusts. Such cases are those where (a) the
Resolution is outside the region's authority or (b) the Regional Director General believes
the proposal should be reviewed by the Deputy Minister. In these cases the region's report
and recommendations go to the Headquarters Additions Committee for review in light of the
departmental policy justifications and site-specific considerations. This committee
formulates a recommendation for the Deputy Minister, who decides whether to reject the
proposal or approve it in principle.
Any conditions to which the approval is
subject (for example environmental steps such as clean-up of a contaminated site) must be
met by the relevant party at this stage. If there are serious difficulties in implementing
the conditions, the proposal may have to be returned to the Deputy Minister for a revised
mandate. Only when these matters have been attended to can the acquisition proceed.
The band, with the assistance of
departmental officials and the Department of Justice, can now enter into negotiations with
the landowner for a conditional agreement to acquire the land. The agreement must include
any relevant conditions imposed at the approval in principle stage as well as any terms
and conditions related to the environmental review process.
If the cost of the property exceeds
$75,000, the approval of the Treasury Board is necessary before regional officials can
proceed with acquiring title to the property and carrying out the necessary surveys.
Following the completion of the acquisition, DIAND must prepare a submission to Cabinet in
order that the Governor in Council can set the land apart as a reserve.
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