Ottawa, ON (December 17, 2018): Major resource projects in oil, gas, and mining are a source of prosperity and economic opportunity in much of Canada. Increasingly, Indigenous communities are also looking to tap into these opportunities.
For the latest edition of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s Straight Talk Q & As, MLI spoke with Julie Ann Wriston, a Métis woman and Indigenous business leader, to discuss the opportunities for mutually-beneficial arrangements between the resource sector and Indigenous communities.
Indigenous businesses are growing faster than almost any other part of the Canadian economy. As well, rates for Indigenous women graduating from post-secondary institutions are increasing. However, despite increasing opportunity, significant barriers continue to negatively impact Indigenous businesses.
Through her own first-hand experience, Wriston learned that “one of our biggest [barriers to development] was lack of access to funding – that our funding was tied to government initiatives and those initiatives didn’t always align with what communities at the grassroots needed.”
She points out that this lack of access to funding is part of a bigger socio-economic trend affecting Indigenous entrepreneurs. “There is an unfortunate stereotype about Indigenous business,” Wriston explains. This stereotype is the false notion that Indigenous businesses “rely on government subsidies.”
As a solution to the funding problem, Wriston argues that stronger, more stable relationships between Indigenous communities and the private sector are needed. Companies need to elect boards that are both diverse and skills-based with an eye towards Indigenous needs. Furthermore, companies need to establish better processes for engaging with First Nations and their advocates.
In Wriston’s experience, by collaborating with communities to build plans for diversity and inclusion, innovative Indigenous companies like Creative Fire are able to capitalize on talent from within their own communities and are able to find greater overall success.
Some of Wriston’s suggestions for Indigenous business in Canada include:
- Redevelopment of policy-driven procurement opportunities that emphasize capacity building at the community level and at the Indigenous business level.
- Remove the access to capital barrier for First Nations and Métis communities.
- Give Indigenous people the opportunity and platform necessary to voice the success stories of Indigenous cooperation with the private sector.
As for suggestions to the Canadian government, Wriston believes that a fundamental shift in the policy framework is necessary to unleash Indigenous opportunity.
“Change policy, make it absolutely a requirement to address and include Indigenous business in all things considered… allow us to access our own dollars, the money that’s in trust, so that we can look at our future and provide good plans in a business capacity to build and gain wealth on our own.”
To read the full Straight Talk Q & A, click here.
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Julie Ann Wriston is a founder and CEO of Evolution Management Consulting. A proud Métis woman, Wriston was also the former CEO of Pinehouse Business North, a construction and labour service company housed in Canada’s North. She currently serves as a Strategist at Creative Fire.
For more information media are invited to contact:
Brett Byers-Lane
Communications and Digital Media Manager
613-482-8327 x105
brett.byers-lane@macdonaldlaurier.ca