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The B.C. government is proposing to increase moose-hunting for a Peace Region First Nation to compensate for impacts of the Site C dam.
For the First Nation and others concerned about the $8.8-billion hydroelectric project which this month marked 100 days of construction, the moose meat in question is one item on a list of Site C-related controversies disturbing the Peace.
The B.C. government will propose changes to moose-hunting regulations, in order “to compensate for Site C-related impacts” in the Peace-Moberly Tract (PMT), a 107,000-hectare swath of land south of the Peace River.
But a representative of the local First Nation said the government is “just shoving this accommodation at us” without proper consultation.
“Having it tied to compensation from Site C is ridiculous,” said Naomi Owens, Saulteau First Nations treaty and land use director, adding she thinks the project will have a “brutal” impact on traditional hunting and fishing territories.