Repeal DRIPA
7,567 signatures
Goal: 10,000 Signatures
Repeal DRIPA
In 2019, the Government of British Columbia passed the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA) to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) at the provincial level.
The government told British Columbians that this law would advance reconciliation without affecting existing rights or creating legal uncertainty.
But the Government was warned at the time that this isn’t how laws work, and that there obviously would be effects.
Those warnings have now been proven correct.
Recent court rulings in British Columbia have made it clear that DRIPA has contributed to serious uncertainty around land ownership, governance, and property rights.
In some cases, courts have found that Aboriginal title can exist alongside fee simple ownership, calling into question the reliability of land titles that families and businesses have relied on for generations.
This matters.
Secure property rights are the foundation of home ownership, access to mortgages, municipal planning, business development, resource extraction, agriculture, job creation, and general economic stability.
If British Columbians can no longer be confident that their property rights are secure, the consequences could be devastating to our province.
DRIPA gives the provincial government a sweeping and open-ended obligation to align all laws with UNDRIP, without clear limits or definitions set by the Legislature.
Laws that fundamentally affect property rights should be debated openly, defined clearly, and decided by elected representatives - not left vague and resolved case by case in the courts.
Instead, those boundaries are being shaped through litigation and court rulings, leaving the public, municipalities, and property owners to deal with the fallout.
Things are so bad that even Premier Eby is now admitting that there are problems with the law, and is promising amendments to it.
But tweaks won’t fix this fundamentally broken legislation - if anything, they’ll just create even more confusion.
British Columbians deserve certainty.
They deserve laws that are clear, predictable, and applied equally to all.
DRIPA has failed to provide that certainty and has instead created confusion, risk, and division.
If you believe that property rights should be secure, that laws should be made by legislators, and that British Columbians deserve clarity about who governs land and under what rules, please sign the petition calling on the Government of British Columbia to repeal DRIPA:
7,567 signatures
Goal: 10,000 Signatures
Repeal DRIPA
In 2019, the Government of British Columbia passed the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA) to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) at the provincial level.
The government told British Columbians that this law would advance reconciliation without affecting existing rights or creating legal uncertainty.
But the Government was warned at the time that this isn’t how laws work, and that there obviously would be effects.
Those warnings have now been proven correct.
Recent court rulings in British Columbia have made it clear that DRIPA has contributed to serious uncertainty around land ownership, governance, and property rights.
In some cases, courts have found that Aboriginal title can exist alongside fee simple ownership, calling into question the reliability of land titles that families and businesses have relied on for generations.
This matters.
Secure property rights are the foundation of home ownership, access to mortgages, municipal planning, business development, resource extraction, agriculture, job creation, and general economic stability.
If British Columbians can no longer be confident that their property rights are secure, the consequences could be devastating to our province.
DRIPA gives the provincial government a sweeping and open-ended obligation to align all laws with UNDRIP, without clear limits or definitions set by the Legislature.
Laws that fundamentally affect property rights should be debated openly, defined clearly, and decided by elected representatives - not left vague and resolved case by case in the courts.
Instead, those boundaries are being shaped through litigation and court rulings, leaving the public, municipalities, and property owners to deal with the fallout.
Things are so bad that even Premier Eby is now admitting that there are problems with the law, and is promising amendments to it.
But tweaks won’t fix this fundamentally broken legislation - if anything, they’ll just create even more confusion.
British Columbians deserve certainty.
They deserve laws that are clear, predictable, and applied equally to all.
DRIPA has failed to provide that certainty and has instead created confusion, risk, and division.
If you believe that property rights should be secure, that laws should be made by legislators, and that British Columbians deserve clarity about who governs land and under what rules, please sign the petition calling on the Government of British Columbia to repeal DRIPA:
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