BC Homeowners Question Land Titles as 200-Year-Old Indigenous Claims Resurface
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 27
BC Homeowners Question Land Titles as 200-Year-Old Indigenous Claims Resurface
6 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 27
British Columbia property holders are increasingly questioning whether their land titles are secure as Indigenous-rights disputes sharpen around DRIPA, the province’s law aligning with the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
One flashpoint sits near Vancouver airport, where an industrial warehouse district on the Fraser River overlaps with a Cowichan village site recorded roughly 200 years ago, turning a local land fight into a provincewide anxiety point.
The dispute has rattled homeowners and politicians because it raises broader questions about how historic Indigenous occupation, modern development and private ownership can coexist under the province’s reconciliation framework.
That uncertainty is widening beyond a single neighborhood, feeding concern across British Columbia over what Indigenous-rights recognition could mean for future land use, legal claims and the practical meaning of ownership.
A court recognized Aboriginal title over private homes. Could your property be the next legal battleground?
A BC law now empowers US tribes to claim rights. Will Indigenous sovereignty soon erase international borders?