May 2, 2026 · 2 min read
In August 2025, Prime Minister Carney launched the Major Projects Office (MPO) — a federal body headquartered in Calgary with a mandate to fast-track nation-building infrastructure projects across Canada. For First Nations leadership, this development is both an opportunity and a governance challenge that demands immediate attention. The Problem: Speed Without Structure Creates Risk Fast-tracking major infrastructure projects does not eliminate the duty to consult — it compresses it. When...
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May 2, 2026 · 2 min read
The federal government has committed to a coordinated, cross-government Indigenous Housing Strategy — and for Band Councils and First Nations leadership, the window to position your community for meaningful benefit is open right now. This is not a distant policy announcement. Funding is flowing, timelines are tightening, and communities that are prepared will capture resources that others will miss. The Problem: Funding Without Readiness Is Funding Lost For decades, Indigenous communities...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
Canada's Spring Economic Update 2026 launched a $1 billion Arctic Infrastructure Fund — dedicated to airports, ports, all-season roads, and highways in the North. The Rankin Inlet and Inuvik airports are already confirmed for modernization. For Indigenous and Northern communities, this is not just a sovereignty investment — it is a direct opportunity to access federal capital for infrastructure that has been underfunded for decades. The Problem: Northern Infrastructure Has Been Chronically...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
Canada's federal government has finalized cooperation agreements with six provinces — Ontario, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Alberta, Manitoba, and Nova Scotia — to implement a single, harmonized environmental assessment process for major projects. The goal: reduce approval timelines from five years to two. For Indigenous Nations and organizations with capital projects in the pipeline, this regulatory shift changes the planning calculus significantly. The Problem: Regulatory Complexity...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
Canada's Spring Economic Update 2026 introduced the Canada Strong Fund — a $25 billion sovereign wealth fund seeded by the federal government and designed to invest in strategic Canadian projects alongside private capital. For Indigenous Nations and organizations involved in major infrastructure and resource development, this is not background noise. It is a new financing instrument that could directly affect the projects you are pursuing. What the Canada Strong Fund Is — and Is Not The...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
As of April 2026, long-term drinking water advisories continue to affect First Nations communities across Canada. Despite years of federal commitment and significant investment, the infrastructure gap persists. The problem is not a lack of political will or funding announcements — it is a gap between funding availability and the community-level capacity to plan, procure, and deliver water infrastructure that actually works. Why Advisories Persist Despite Federal Investment Water and...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
Two First Nations in Ontario now hold a nearly 20 per cent equity stake in Hydro One's Chatham to Lakeshore transmission line. Thirty-eight First Nations in British Columbia hold a 12.5 per cent stake in Enbridge's Westcoast pipeline system. Both transactions were made possible by the Canada Indigenous Loan Guarantee Corporation (CILGC) — and both signal a fundamental shift in how Indigenous Nations can participate in Canada's infrastructure economy. The Problem: Capital Access Has Been the...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
On April 7, 2026, the federal government launched the Build Communities Strong Fund (BCSF) — a $51 billion, 10-year investment in local infrastructure. Hospitals, universities, water systems, roads, and transit are all in scope. For Indigenous communities and local governments, this is one of the largest infrastructure funding windows in a generation. The question is not whether the money is available. The question is whether your organization is positioned to access it. The Problem: Funding...
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May 1, 2026 · 2 min read
On April 1, 2026, Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) replaced its decades-old tendering directive with a new Policy on Tendering for First Nations' Federally Funded Capital Projects. For Band Councils, housing directors, and capital project managers, this is not a minor administrative update — it is a structural change to how federally funded infrastructure work gets procured on reserve. The Problem: Outdated Rules in a High-Stakes Environment First Nations communities are managing more capital...
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April 30, 2026 · 2 min read
Most First Nations have a Comprehensive Community Plan. Far fewer have a capital budget that reflects it. Here's how to close the execution gap — and turn long-term vision into funded, delivered projects.
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April 30, 2026 · 2 min read
The Canada Housing Infrastructure Fund is actively funding water, wastewater, and community infrastructure projects. Here's what Indigenous communities and municipal governments need to know to access it in 2026.
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April 30, 2026 · 2 min read
Economic reconciliation is no longer a policy discussion — it is a transaction. Indigenous Nations across Canada are securing equity stakes in major energy and infrastructure projects. Here's how the model works and what it takes to participate.
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