Conservative MLA Donegal Wilson calls on NDP government to host an open town hall meeting re: Okanagan Falls’ incorporation
IMAGE CREDIT: Regional District of Okanagan Similkameen
"Reconciliation and democracy are not competing values; they must work together. True reconciliation requires transparency, trust, and participation.” ~~ Donegal Wilson, MLA for Boundary-Similkameen
OKANAGAN FALLS, BC — Conservative MLA for Boundary-Similkameen Donegal Wilson is
demanding transparency following NDP Housing and Municipal Affairs
Minister Christine Boyle’s decision to exclude her from negotiations
regarding Okanagan Falls’ incorporation. Christine Boyle was formerly
the Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation until July
2025.
MLA
Wilson says this decision highlights the NDP’s culture of secrecy and
displays a blatant disregard for community and rural voices.
Conservatives are calling for Minister Boyle to immediately schedule an
open town hall meeting in Okanagan Falls to hear from local leaders and
members of the public.
MLA Wilson released the following statement:
“Last
month, I raised concerns about how the incorporation of Okanagan Falls
has been stalled under the NDP government’s interpretation of the
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA). Since then,
I have met directly with the Minister responsible, and what I was told
only deepens my concerns.”
“The
Minister informed me that while I may request updates on the
negotiations, I will not be allowed to participate directly, noting that
this is considered standard practice in “government-to-government”
negotiations. In other words, she is consciously choosing to exclude the
elected MLA for Boundary-Similkameen. This
means the NDP government
believes it is better positioned to negotiate at a government-led,
facilitated table behind closed doors — with representation coming from
Vancouver-Little Mountain — rather than include the MLA chosen by local
residents to represent them.”
“This is not how democracy is supposed to work.”
“Reconciliation
with Indigenous peoples is an important and shared goal. Indigenous
leaders are right to advocate for the interests of their members — that
is what they were elected to do. The fault here does not lie with
Indigenous communities. It lies with the NDP government for creating a
process that fuels mistrust through secrecy and sidelines the voices of
rural residents. Reconciliation and democracy are not competing values;
they must work together. True reconciliation requires transparency,
trust, and participation. It should strengthen relationships, not weaken
them.”
“If
the Minister insists that I cannot sit at the table, then she must come
to Okanagan Falls and hear directly from the people she claims to
represent. If she intends to speak for this community in negotiations,
she must first listen — unfiltered — to their concerns and
expectations.”
“I’ve
listened to this community first-hand: they want accountability, local
representation, and a transparent process. To suggest that urban
politicians in Victoria or Vancouver know better than the people who
live here is not just wrong — it is profoundly disconnected from
reality.”
“I
am therefore calling on the Minister to immediately schedule an open
town hall meeting in Okanagan Falls. Residents deserve a voice in
shaping their future. Refusing this invitation would only confirm what
many already fear: that this government prefers backroom deals to honest
dialogue with rural British Columbians.”
“When
this process is complete, Indigenous and non-Indigenous people alike
will continue to live side by side as neighbours, co-workers, and
friends. The residents of Okanagan Falls deserve a process that honours
both their democratic choice and the principles of reconciliation. The
NDP government’s current path is failing both.”
“The Minister owes the community a town hall in Okanagan Falls.”

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