B.C. First Nation asks UN body to count cultural losses in spill compensation formula
VICTORIA — An international group that sets the compensation formula for maritime oil spills doesn’t factor in the devastating cultural losses to First Nations, says an Indigenous leader whose Coastal B.C. nation has experienced a disastrous fuel spill.
Marilyn Slett, the elected chief of the Heiltsuk Nation on British Columbia’s central coast, will be in London on Tuesday to address the International Maritime Organization, an agency within the United Nations.
The body sets global standards for the safety, security and environmental performance of international shipping, and Slett said she will be asking the organization’s legal committee to include Indigenous cultural losses.
Almost a decade ago, the tug Nathan E. Stewart, hauling a tank barge ran aground about 10 nautical miles west of Bella Bella, B.C., in Heiltsuk territory.


