Listen Live
Listen Live
Listen Live

Chief of Xat’sull First Nation chooses not to re-run

There will be a new Chief for the Soda Creek Indian Band (Xat’sull First Nation) on Monday.

Chief Bev Sellars, who finishes her last day in office as Chief on Friday, says she is looking forward to making some space in her life for the some of the many projects she has on the go.

Sellars adds that she loved being Chief and will be running for Council in May.

Some those changes include financial stability, plans for economic development including building a new community, and transparency, Sellars says, who believes that the new Chief will have an uphill learning curve ahead.

Sellars has been Chief of the Soda Creek Indian Band since August of 2011 and also served as Chief in 1987-1993.

Something going on in the Cariboo you think people should know about?
Send us a news tip by emailing [email protected].

Rebecca Dyok
Rebecca Dyok
News Reporter/Anchor who loves the Cariboo and coffee (lots of it).If you have any news tips or story ideas you would like to share I can be reached at [email protected]

Continue Reading

ckbx Now playing play

cffm Now playing play

ckcq Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Quesnel area woman to be sentenced for manslaughter

  52-year old Lona Lynette Cole will be back in Supreme Court on December 8th to set a date for sentencing.

B.C. Hydro cites unforeseen risks for Site C dam cost overruns

B.C. Hydro is blaming the outsized costs for the Site C dam construction on a series of “low probability, high consequence” events, and said it should have done a better job preparing for those risks. The post B.C. Hydro cites unforeseen risks for Site C dam cost overruns appeared first on AM 1150.

‘Generational investment’: Ottawa’s 2025 budget focuses on housing, workers and clean energy

A “generational investment” is how Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne introduced the 2025 federal budget, a plan that pours money into housing, workers and clean-energy projects.

The Witness Blanket to be displayed at Quesnel Prince George’s CNC Campuses

The Witness Blanket, a national monument, created by Carey Newman from reclaimed items honouring residential school survivors will be on display at the College of New Caledonia's Quesnel campus from Nov. 5 to Nov. 21, then at the College's Prince George campus from Nov. 27 to Dec. 30.

Free transit and ferry rides for veterans in B.C. on Remembrance Day

Ferries and public transit in parts of British Columbia will be free for veterans as the province marks Remembrance Day next Tuesday. The post Free transit and ferry rides for veterans in B.C. on Remembrance Day appeared first on AM 1150.
- Advertisement -