The trip through Cape Breton Island, on the northeastern tip of Nova Scotialucky horse, promised scenic driving views. The island regularly appears in travel guides for the world’s best road trips, an agent at the airport’s car rental counter told me in September after I landed in Halifax.
ImageChief Terry Paul of Membertou First Nation was re-elected in June, his 40th consecutive year leading the community.Credit...Andrew Testa for The New York TimesI didn’t get to take in much of the landscape on my rainy overnight drive to Cape Breton from the other end of the province, where I had been reporting on a forthcoming story related to lobster fishing. Over the course of my interviews, several people suggested that I visit an Indigenous community on Cape Breton Island called Membertou First Nation.
Mr. Pogorzelski confirmed his resignation in a text message on Sunday evening, saying he and seven other campaign staffers had resigned on “our own accord.”
The timeline of the deal allows Congress to sidestep a government shutdown during the campaign season, but it all but ensures that spending disputes will dominate the lame-duck period between the election and the inauguration of a new Congress in January.
Its entrepreneurial chief, Terry Paul, led a coalition of First Nation groups to make the largest-ever investment by Indigenous people in Canada’s seafood industry in 2021. The coalition acquired 50 percent of Clearwater Seafoods, a company in Nova Scotia, in a deal valued at 1 billion Canadian dollars. In September, Membertou partnered with another First Nation and made a deal to acquire one of the oldest shipyards in Canada.
Membertou is buying back land to expand the boundaries of the community, once a place where pizza delivery drivers and taxis wouldn’t venture to cross. Graduation rates have climbed. Mi’kmaq language revival projects are underway. Young people are staying.
After seven hours on the road, I didn’t quite notice my arrival onto the reserve grounds until a large red sign outside a convention center emerged through the fog: “Membertou: Welcoming the World.”
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