

Winter 2000 Issue
COVER:
Barb
Cramner
She has a
face wide and mobile, a sun-filled smile.
BIOGRAPHY:
Judge Steven Point
Judge
Steven Point...is one of a handful of First Nations people appointed a
judge of the Provincial Court of BC.
Susan
Aglukark
In only seven
years of performing...Susan Aglukark has emerged as a leading voice in
Canadian music.
BUSINESS:
Lindley Family Farms
Faced with a choice
between commercial or agricultural development, a First Nation's
family opted for the latter
Mohawks To Be "Offshore"
Banking Power
The
Kahnawake Mohawk Nation...says it will establish its reserve as a
"sovereign financial territory"...
CULTURE:
Bee
in the Bonnet
"What?
How much?" The sweet little old lady said as she bought her
cigarettes...
Gangsters Out to Beat The Rap
Three
teenagers saunter down the sidewalk in Winnipeg, one dragging a bicycle
and another carrying a plastic bag.
Embrace the Visionaries
... thirteen Salish
artists using various media and from various backgrounds.
EDUCATION:
Visions Conference
A traveling road show is
currently making the rounds...bringing a message of hope and opportunity
to the Native youth..
HISTORY:
Murder
of Anna Mae Aquash
When Anna Mae
Aquash was buried, women from the Pine Ridge Reservation dug her grave
themselves in the March cold.
MODERN TREATIES:
National
Chief Urges Action By the Government
Phil
Fontaine.. stated today that the federal government must begin working
immediately with First Nations...
NWT Treaty 8 Tribal Corporation
The Chiefs of Akaitcho
Treaty 8 met Minister Robert Nault...
POLITICS:
Registration
To Redress Racist Dirty Tricks
Fifty years of
political chicanery and racist shenanigans have deprived Newfoundland
native people of their rights... |
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Visions Conference:
Youthful Entrepreneurs Get
Options
By Ronald B. Barbour
New Westminster-A traveling road show is currently making the rounds within the province bringing a message of hope and opportunity to the Native youth regarding their future.
The Ministry of Small Business, Tourism and Culture, the sponsors of a dozen youth options programs developed the Visions for the Future conferences as a response to concerns expressed by contemporary youth.
"This is the second year, officially, of the program, but the idea for it came about 1996 after the Premier's Youth Forum," says Chris McAuliffe, a communications
coordinator for the Ministry of Small Business, Tourism and Culture.
"This program is in particular is set up to identify opportunities for Aboriginal youth throughout the province in terms of career planning, business training, some of the educational opportunities that are available to them within the communities."
The Visions for the Future conferences are targeting Native youth ages 15-29 and is delivering their hopeful message to 14 urban centres thoughout the province. The Visions for the Future conference stopped at Douglas College recently - the only conference slated for the lower mainland.
The Visions... conference brought together a host of representatives from a wide variety of education institutions and potential funding sources such as Langara College's new Aboriginal Studies program; NITEP; First Nations Health Careers; Nicola Valley Institute of Technology; Ministry of Attorney General; Kwantlen College; Ministry of Social Development and Economic Security; Open Learning Institute; Youth Options B.C.; Pittman's Business College; Canadian Tourism College; Options For Youth and reps for Litefoot's return engagement - Red Ryder Tour '99.
Flavio Caron, contracted by the Ministry and Visions to co-ordinate this conference is excited about what the Vision conference offers youth.
"Three major things the first being awareness - awareness of opportunity. And with awareness of opportunity, trying to match that into self-confidence, self-esteem issues and bringing that to the forefront," says Caron.
"The Second one is, again with the opportunity, career options that go with that and in the Aboriginal community, we have a perhaps it's a mythical advantage of that we know what the word 'vision' means. So that's what I try instill as well. We have to have a vision - a personal vision, cultural vision, a community vision that we're working towards and matching that vision with those career opportunities, so that you're doing something that you love and that ties in with having a passion for life in what you're doing.
"We're also linking together the entrepreneurial spirit with those career options. The biggest growth in the economy without question...is the growth in self-employment. So even if that's not the choice for a young person, you'll have to be aware of it as an option."
The Visions for the Future conferences will be targeting these following locations: Prince George, Chetwynd, Fort St. James, Kelowna during late October and early November, Massett/Haida Gwaii on November 8th; Victoria/Saanich on November 15th; Port Hardy on November 19th; Lillooet on November 24, and in Merritt, January 2000.
Caron stresses what he understands to be a key point for finding your way to success. "Find out what you want to do - find out what you'd love to do, find out what you're good at. Make it part of your life's passion," says Caron.
From that point Caron suggests that the opportunities and options can be exploited though many of the various funding programs available such as Options for Youth, and YOU BET, the Youth Business and Entrepreneurship Training Program.
McAuliffe feels the Visions... conferences have been quite successful in bringing useful and accessible information to the youth.
"Last year our target for participation was 750 youth and by the end of our program year we had over 2500 participants - and that was with 11 conferences," says McAuliffe.
"This year we're running 14 conferences across the province. We're hoping to get a thousand participants but I'm sure that number will be surpassed very soon."
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