First PeoplesTerritory relations - ACT Community Services 2025

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The Local Government Act provides for Treaty First Nations to participate in regional governance (i.e. Regional Districts) similar to how municipalities do. Currently, seven of eight modern Treaty First Nations are members of regional districts and shshlh Nation sits on the Sunshine Coast Regional District board.
The ACT Government recognises the Ngunnawal people as traditional custodians of the ACT and surrounding region. The Government acknowledges that other people and families also have a traditional connection to the lands of the ACT and region and we respect this connection to country.
In 2005, in response to a question in the ACT Legislative Assembly about the status of the Ngambri people, the Chief Minister at the time, Jon Stanhope stated that Ngambri is the name of one of a number of family groups that make up the Ngunnawal nation.
The ACT Government is accountable to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities through: the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander committees and representative bodies. agreements and plans where we must work together to achieve fair outcomes for Indigenous peoples in the ACT.
The term most commonly refers to those peoples subjugated since the late 15th century by European powers and their colonies. Indigenous governance refers to the myriad ways in which these peoples have governed themselves or continue doing so despite the fact of colonization.
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On February 26, 2025, the Chiefs of Ontario, Nishnawbe Aski Nation, and Canada jointly announced they have reached a $8.5 billion landmark Agreement to reform First Nations child and family services in Ontario.

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