North Cowichan pauses renaming requests for its facilities, parks and other public assets. (Citizen file photo)

North Cowichan pauses renaming requests for its facilities, parks and other public assets. (Citizen file photo)

North Cowichan pauses renaming requests

Satt developing more equitable and collaborative direction

North Cowichan council has decided that civic-asset renaming requests and requests for bilingual signage be paused while staff develop a reconciliation framework that will provide more equitable and collaborative direction.

The moratorium includes the renaming of facilities, parks and other public assets, and also pauses renaming and bilingual signage requests that are currently under consideration.

The direction was a recommendation by North Cowichan’s First Nations relations committee, and was developed through research into current and past practices within the municipality, as well as other municipal and provincial organizations.

The proposed reconciliation framework will take into consideration the implementation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Calls to Action, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and consultation with North Cowichan’s First Nations and other equity-deserving groups regarding their preferred involvement.

Bilingual (English/Hul’q’umi’num’) signage has been explored and implemented in an ad hoc fashion across the Cowichan Valley for a number of years.

Definitive policy direction in North Cowichan will help inform how bilingual signage is approached in the future.

The province, through the BC Geographical Names Office, has engaged local governments on proposed updates to provincial geographical naming principles, policies and procedures, which outline how decisions about geographical place names — such as mountains, rivers, and other such features — are made.

An explicit proposed change the province is engaging on is to “acknowledge the importance of documenting and restoring Indigenous place names as an act of reconciliation.”

Commmunity

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