Sask. Government and FSIN sign historic First Nation education deal
With the quick signing of their names, Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations (FSIN) Vice Chief Bobby Cameron and Education Minister Don Morgan made Canadian history with an agreement around First Nations’ education.
“The signing of this document represents a mutual respect and confirms that both organizations will strive to work together to make a better future for First Nations students in Saskatchewan,” Morgan said.
The memorandum agreement states that both the FSIN and the Ministry of Education respect and recognize each other’s contributions and responsibilities. It also identifies that each Chief and Council exercises control and jurisdiction when it comes to education of First Nations youth in Treaty territories. It is the first of it’s kind in Canada and is critical in the wake of the First Nations Control of First Nations Education Act (Bill C-33) proposed by the federal government and rejected by First Nations leadership in May 2014, according to Vice-Chief Cameron.
“We at the FSIN have been having various meetings the past three years regarding Bill C-33… The conservative government has been on record saying that until the First Nation communities support Bill C33, only then will funding flow,” Cameron said.


