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Hope Remains Ancient Archaeological Site Can Be Saved

By Joan Delaney
Epoch Times Staff
Created: December 3, 2009 Last Updated: December 3, 2009
Related articles: Canada » National
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Schmidt, who has tried but failed to have the six-acre site, known as Lot B, rezoned for development, said it would be worth up to $3 million if it weren’t for the presence of the artifacts and burial site.

Timbercrest has built about 300 homes on the land so far and would like to put up another 20 on Lot B.

In the hopes that the province will buy the site, Schmidt and the Cowichan Tribes met with Kevin Krueger, provincial minister of Tourism, Culture and the Arts, on Nov. 4. Krueger’s office did not respond to a request for comment, but Dianne Hinkley, Cowichan Tribes’ land research director, says the meeting was “positive.”

“I think we got the assurance that some of his staff and some of the Ministry of Aboriginal Relations staff are going to look into different possibilities.”

Hinkley says the site should be preserved as a “cultural landmark” where people could learn about First Nation pre-contact history in B.C.

“It's not just important to the people in the valley, but to British Columbia, nationally, and I think internationally as well. We owe it to our ancient history to take care of it and learn about it and respect it the same way that people in other countries care for their archaeological heritage.”

McLay says that although B.C. has some of the strongest heritage legislation in North America, the Archaeology Branch has a staff of just 15, all of whom are based in Victoria, to regulate approximately 33,000 archeological sites across the province.

“It really is a matter of political priorities that they're not given the resources necessary to be effective in regulating the Heritage Conservation Act.”

Numerous sites have been built over, he adds.

“It’s an unfortunate situation where heritage preservation is trumped by land development for the most part and I really think there's a need for greater public education regarding the importance of these sites and their importance to First Nations as well, and to raise public awareness of the importance of protecting them.”

There’s “certainly a good scientific and cultural rationale” for preserving the Somenos Creek site, McLay says.

“The government just has not been forthcoming in helping the situation and helping to resolve this conflict. It’s kind of symptomatic of the reconciliation process in British Columbia itself—that it's really a lot of talk and not a lot of action when it comes down to the ground.”






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