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Saskatchewan Sage

Saskatchewan Sage

Launched in 1996. A news publication specifically designed to serve the Indigenous people of Saskatchewan.

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Students receive new financial assistance

Aboriginal students in the Moose Jaw and Regina areas have access to new funding through the Aboriginal Student Empowerment Fund, created by Farm Credit Canada and four Saskatchewan post-secondary institutions. The $50,000 fund will support Aboriginal students attending the University of Regina, the First Nations University of…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Partnership formed for oil exploration

A signing ceremony was held on Sept. 2 marking the partnership between Flying Dust First Nation and Braveheart Oil and Gas Ltd. Braveheart, which is based in Calgary, will drill for oil on reserve land in the Bakken Oil Field in southern Saskatchewan and share the profits with Flying Dust. The roots of the partnership go back to…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Local housing developments announced

Provincial funding of $2.4 million and a partnership between the province and Silver Sage Housing Corporation will result in a new affordable housing development for First Nation families in Swift Current.  The townhouse style units, 22 in total, will be located close to shopping, recreation facilities and schools. The new units will…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Homes for the Homeless floundering

Homes for the Homeless, out of Prince Albert, is struggling. The organization assists families and individuals to find homes in that city. “We are in a crisis and more important our clients are in a crisis,” program co-ordinator Janice Henry told the Prince Albert Daily Herald. Homes for the Homeless was a pilot program which concluded…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Contract signed with RCMP for another 20 years

The provincial and federal governments have concluded four years of negotiations which have led to the RCMP providing services in Saskatchewan for another 20 years, from April 1, 2012 until March 31, 2032. The contract continues the current cost-sharing model, with the province paying 70 per cent of the costs and the federal government…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Provincial funding comes for new Health Bus

The provincial government will provide $50,000 toward the $380,000 cost of a new Mobile Health Bus. The new vehicle will replace the bus that currently provides health services to Saskatoon’s inner-city neighbourhoods. The Health Bus operates seven days a week, parking at set locations on the city’s west side to support…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

RCMP attached at La Loche hospital

The RCMP are investigating an incident on Sept. 30 where officers barricaded the hospital in La Loche and used pepper spray to prevent up to 70 people from getting inside. An RCMP news release stated, “It is believed the crowd’s intent was to forcibly remove the two La Loche (RCMP) members that were inside the hospital. The members and…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Aboriginal cultural workers in Saskatoon hospitals

Ron Thompson and Delores Wutunee-Gardipy have been hired to fill two newly created positions as Aboriginal cultural workers, helping to meet the spiritual needs of patients in the Saskatoon Health Region. The creation of the new positions came out of a recommendation in the region’s Aboriginal health strategy report,…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Compiled by Shari Narine

Governor General stops in Saskatchewan

Wanuskewin Heritage Park was among Governor General David Johnston’s official stops in Saskatchewan. “I’m struck by your guiding principles, which I believe can serve us well in our effort to build a smart and caring nation,” Johnston said in an article in the StarPhoenix. “You are committed to honouring the Elders; to authenticity…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Sam Laskaris Sage Writer SASKATOON

Jo-Ann Carignan-Vallee has a dream to one day, hopefully later this decade, have a trail in Saskatchewan connecting the Wanuskewin Heritage Park and the Whitecap Dakota First Nation.

“I can’t stress enough how this is a dream. But in five to six years it could be a dream that comes true,” said Carignan-Vallee, the Saskatchewan co-ordinator of the Trans Canada Trail.

Depending on…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Sam Laskaris Sage Writer PRINCE ALBERT

When students returned to classes in September at the Prince Albert campus of the First Nations University of Canada, it was hard for them not to notice how green their school was becoming.

Thanks to a dedicated group of individuals called the Footprints Committee, which was launched in the spring of 2009, those at the university are participating in numerous environmentally friendly…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Sam Laskaris Sage Writer REGINA

A dozen young Aboriginal people from across Saskatchewan who view higher education as a priority have been chosen as role models to appear in the 2012 version of A Proud Generation Calendar.

“We’re really big on education,” said Conway Samuelson, the calendar’s recruitment specialist, who oversees the nomination process.

Applicants’ post-secondary education plans along with their…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Sam Laskaris Sage Writer SASKATOON

A Saskatoon company that has worked extensively with Aboriginal communities recently won a pair of national awards.

TinyEYE Therapy Services is a business that was co-founded five years ago by Marnee Brick, a speech language pathologist, and her brother Greg Sutton.
Brick, who previously worked for a private therapy company, was disappointed she wasn’t reaching more people who…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Sam Laskaris Sage Writer BUFFALO NARROWS

Métis from Saskatchewan and across Canada were mourning the loss of one of their leaders in late August.
Phillip Chartier, a lifelong advocate of Métis rights, died on Aug. 29 following a battle with cancer. He was 61.
Chartier is survived by his wife and their five children; Terry, Adrian, Peter, Sean and Kayla. His family also includes eight grandchildren and one great grandchild.…

  • October 13, 2011
  • Heather Andrews Miller Sage Writer SASKATOON

The Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology is hoping that six new student advisors will help Aboriginal students experience success in their studies and transition.

“Students can do it, they just need some support,” said Myrna Yuzicapi, special advisor to SIAST Aboriginal Initiatives and supervisor of the six advisors. “We have a wide range of certificate and diploma…