Supreme Court of Canada to hear appeal in British Columbia mineral claims case
OTTAWA — British Columbia’s Attorney General said her government may still bring forward legislation to amend key parts of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, even as the Supreme Court of Canada will hear the province’s appeal of a landmark ruling.
Niki Sharma, who is also B.C.’s deputy premier, says her government is very pleased that Canada’s highest court will hear British Columbia’s appeal of a ruling that found the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the provincial mineral claims regime are “inconsistent.”
The B.C. Court of Appeal ruled in December that the provincial Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act should be “properly interpreted” to incorporate UNDRIP into the laws of B.C. with immediate legal effect.
That ruling prompted several unsuccessful attempts by Premier David Eby’s government to directly amend or pause key sections of DRIPA to avoid what he called legal exposure — attempts that nearly threatened his government’s survival.


