Thursday, 12 February 2026

 

Viewpoint: United Nations-aligned laws create two-tiered society

'The public must understand the principle that legal capacity creates its own unending demand'

Feb. 11, 2026

Powell River-Sunshine Coast MLA Randene Neill, who is also BC’s minister of water, land and resource stewardship, made no additional explanations or assuaged public anxiety with her answers to Powell River Westview Ratepayers Association on Feb 6.

Neill was invited to respond to written pre-submitted questions about the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. BC premier David Eby has said the government will be amending DRIPA before the summer break of 2026 to scale back the power courts have in shaping reconciliation efforts. Recent court decisions have created confusion about what the act means in practice. Eby said his government is also planning to appeal the court decision to defend private property rights, but no documents have been filed.

However, Eby does not admit his legislation created all the legal problems. He won’t admit DRIPA is not fixable, and that the legislation cannot pretend to be one thing (social reconciliation -peace -certainty -trust) while being another —a big highway to unending demands. The NDP is the only government in the world that has made such enabling legislation at the behest of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Meanwhile, BC Conservatives want to repeal DRIPA, claiming the government has continued to cause uncertainty by signing land-use agreements with First Nations without widespread public input, consultation and social approval. The NDP claims settlement deals are the business of government to government, and that the public is only peripherally relevant to the process.

DRIPA is dividing British Columbians, say BC Conservatives, and people are being left to wonder whether land access, development rights and long-standing property law can change overnight, without significant public debate.

Eby says Indigenous claims to land title predates the DRIPA legislation and First Nations title was not invented by DRIPA. He said it is grounded in Canada's constitution and repealing DRIPA would remove the road map they have with First Nations for how to resolve matters outside of court. It would bring more conflicts in the court and slow projects down. Repealing DRIPA would return us to a darker, conflict-oriented time and set us back a generation in our relationship with First Nations, Eby said.

However, in my view, under the guise of “reconciliation,” the province is being reshaped—not by democratic consensus, but by ideology embedded into law.

For example, the Cowichan Ruling of 2025 was a decision legitimizing aboriginal title over private property homeowners in Richmond, based on questionable hearsay evidence from 150 years ago. This ruling, influenced by NDP provincial government “practice directives” prioritizing Indigenous reconciliation claims, discards the established rule of law and creates unequal treatment based on race. It is certain that every legal loophole and advantage will be always exploited to the sole advantage of the claimants.

Residents of Okanagan Falls, a community that is 97 per cent non-Indigenous, were blindsided to learn their efforts to incorporate and become a city have now subjected them to DRIPA. The neighbouring Osoyoos First Nation has claimed it wants Okanagan Falls’ name, and potentially street names, changed to their preference. They also want crown land removed from proposed city boundaries.

The public must understand the principle that legal capacity creates its own unending demand. United Nations-aligned laws create a two-tiered society, where a privileged group’s legal authority takes precedence over the interests of the majority. That’s not reconciliation—it is one-way capitulation, including implied social guilt.

At the ratepayers meeting, Neill said she would vote for amendment and not the repeal of DRIPA. The Conservatives alternative is to completely repeal and replace with more traditional negotiation processes.

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