The president of the Friends of the Nemiah Valley, Dave Williams, notices how large-scale industrial mining and clear-cut logging would not be allowed in the future Dasiqox Tribal Park.
This illustrates the common extent up to which an organization is able to plan its business model without receiving an impact from First Nations; however, from here these plans are to adequate their ideas and goals to meet aboriginal’s protective regulations for land and animals.
It is important to consider that the meaning of flora and fauna for First Nations is a more valuable resource than for many other Canadians. In this sense, organizations are to focus in creating value not only to their prospective customers but also to these peoples from whom they definitely “take away” part of their culture as for all the rituals and ceremonies that are held within the aboriginal places.
To create strategic, responsible and conservational plans that give an important attention to the obtaining of permits and licenses from First Nations by, for example, the offering of employment for natives will allow private organizations to arrive in further stages and to not get stuck in the middle of the process as happened with the sudden declaration of a Tribal Park due to the threat First Nations felt when a new mining and clear-cut logging business model was released.
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