Métis groups file historic inter-provincial land claim through oil sands country
Traditional Métis territories in Northern Saskatchewan and Alberta filed a claim covering roughly 122,000 square kilometres, most of which is in oil sands territory, at Court of Queen’s Bench in Saskatoon Wednesday.
The inter-provincial land claim is the first of its kind, and the Métis are looking to reclaim the land that wasn’t given to them by the government in the late 1800s.
At that time, Aboriginal title and rights of the Métis people were recognized. Those rights brought the need to deal with Canada’s colonization scheme, creating a program to allocate land, called ‘scrip’.
The scrip system entitled 160 to 240 acres of land, or monetary compensation, to each Métis individual.