Peter moonias was chief in 2014 of neskantaga, and Wayne is chief now.
Did he move his family back to Neskantaga ...from Thunder bay??
Or is he still collecting a paycheque while living in Thunder bay? He did in 2015 when he was a "new relationshipship liason officer???"
http://pse5-esd5.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/fnp/Main/Search/FederalFundingMain.aspx?BAND_NUMBER=239&lang=eng
From a previous post of mine.
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Here's the funny thing about Wayne.....it can be found if you read this article... from May 1, 2014.....
http://www.cbc.ca/news/aboriginal/neskantaga-first-nation-raises-alarm-as-suicides-continue-1.2627548
The first paragraph should get any one.....confused? Angered?
"I't's ironic that in order to cover a story on the remote Neskantaga First Nation in Northern Ontario, I went to one of the ritziest hotels in downtown Toronto.
Peter Moonias, the chief of the Neskantaga First Nation says the choice of venue was deliberate. They knew that a press conference highlighting the crisis in his community would get more attention here. "
Personally......If I was Peter Moonias...I'd bring them to the reserve..to see the conditions there....but one of the ritziest hotels ...was a better venue????
Here's where it gets more interesting.....in this article...
"Wayne Moonias is a councillor of Neskantaga but six years ago he and his family had to make a tough decision to leave their community.
“My family had to be uprooted to Thunder Bay because our 16 year old daughter had a medical issue… We made a decision as a family that they needed access to proper care in an urban centre like Thunder Bay. My daughter has three doctors she has to see regularly in Thunder bay just to maintain [her health]. That was a difficult decision for our family to make.”
Band councillor Wayne Moonias and his family were forced to leave the Neskantaga First Nation because his daughter's medical condition requires care she can't access in the community. (CBC)
Moonias and his family return to Neskantaga every summer. He wishes that everyone in his community had access to the same services he does in Thunder Bay"