Tsawwassen Lands Explained

The Tsawwassen Lands is the sole reserve of land that the Tsawwassen First Nation has authority over in British Columbia, Canada, and is located adjacent to the causeway of the Tsawwassen ferry terminal. To the south is the Canada–United States border and on the north is Canoe Pass, an arm of the Fraser River. The First Nation operates a park-and-ride for ferry customers, and also has a residential development housing non-natives called Tsatsu Shores just south of the causeway. The Tsawwassen Lands, which were extinguished as an Indian Reserve and are now fee-simple land holdings since the Tsawwassen Treaty, effective April 3, 2009, are 662ha in area.[1]

The Tsawwassen Mills mall is located within this area.

See also

References

49.0347°N -123.0958°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Nation . 2022-08-09 . Tsawwassen First Nation . en-US.