Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - March 23, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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HE federal and Manitoba govern-
ments are putting up $40 million
to search a Winnipeg-area landfill
for the remains of two First Nations
women who police believe were slain
by a serial killer.
At a meeting Friday, Premier Wab
Kinew assured Morgan Harris and
Marcedes Myran’s families “every
cubic metre” will be searched in the
cell, or section, where the women are
believed to be located.
“Today, and every day moving for-
ward, will be very, very tough,” Har-
ris’s daughter, Cambria Harris, said af-
ter the meeting in downtown Winnipeg.
“I am grateful there is a commitment
being made. It’s been a long road.
“It is a step forward for Indigenous
Peoples, and it’s about taking back that
narrative from those who stole it from
us. It’s going to be survivor- and family-
led going forward.”
Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand
Chief Cathy Merrick said there is no
timeline yet as to when the search could
begin, but she hopes it will not take long
to find the women’s remains.
“Today is a very bittersweet day. It’s
a sense of relief, but yet work needs to
be done,” she said.
Manitoba and Ottawa have ear-
marked $20 million each to search Prai-
rie Green Landfill, a private operation
just north of Winnipeg, plus a combined
$700,000 for mental health supports to
those affected.
“Our commitment to search the land-
fill has been unrelenting,” Kinew said
in a statement.
“Now, we’re glad to be able to move
forward with the funds necessary to
search every cubic metre of the rel-
evant space.
“While we don’t know if the search
will be successful, we have to try. That’s
our commitment to these families.”
The $40-million pledge is significant-
ly less than estimates provided in feas-
ibility and operational studies, which
were conducted by an assembly-led
committee with more than $1 million in
federal funding.
The latest study, completed in Janu-
ary, said a search could cost up to $90
million if completed within a year.
“It’s a start,” Merrick said of the $40
million.
“It’s very important that this process
starts and keeps continuing.”
Winnipeg police believe the remains
of Harris, 39, and Myran, 26, were de-
posited in Prairie Green in May 2022.
Jeremy Skibicki is charged with
first-degree murder in their deaths and
those of two other Indigenous women —
Rebecca Contois, 24, and unidentified
victim named Buffalo Woman (Mash-
kode Bizhiki’ikwe) by elders.
Contois’s remains were found in a
North Kildonan garbage bin in May
2022 and, weeks later, in the Brady
Road landfill, south of the city, during
a search by police.
Buffalo Woman’s remains have not
been found.
Skibicki’s weeks-long trial is sched-
uled to begin in April.
“I pray that one day we will see jus-
tice,” said Cambria Harris.
The funding commitment has given
her “a bit of hope.”
“It’s about showing that our Indigen-
ous women, our Indigenous people that
we’re worth it, we’re valued, we’re loved
and we are more than worth searching
for,” she said.
As for the search committee, its for-
ensic experts will be consulted to better
understand what the funding allows for,
in terms of hiring and training work-
ers, and acquiring equipment or facili-
ties, Merrick said.
Preparatory work could take place
while the trial is underway.
Merrick said the Harris and Myran
families, who’ve been pleading for a
search since they were informed of the
deaths in December 2022, do not want
to be forced to go back and ask the gov-
ernments for more money.
“We want to see this work be complet-
ed,” she said. “We want to ensure that
we find the loved ones that have been
there (since May 2022) and that we be
able to — hopefully, God willing — that
we be able to find them and be able to
bring them home.”
Merrick said other families whose
loved ones were found in landfills in
Canada were not forced to plead for
searches or carry out feasibility stud-
ies.
“A lot of money has been spent to
convince governments to do the right
thing,” she said, referring to the com-
mittee’s two studies.
Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister
Gary Anandasangaree and Winnipeg
Mayor Scott Gillingham also attended
Friday’s meeting.
Only Morgan Harris and Merrick
held a news conference afterward.
“We remain committed as we work
with all partners towards an approach
that will bring closure and healing for
the families and community members,”
Crown-Indigenous Relations spokes-
man Matthieu Perrotin wrote in an
email.
Merrick noted the city had offered to
help find land, if needed, to accommo-
date a facility where excavated materi-
al would be examined.
Last year, the committee’s first re-
port suggested the women’s remains
are in an area that measures 200 by 100
metres, with a maximum waste depth
of 10 metres.
It said up to 61,000 tonnes of material
would be excavated.
The report said the preferred option
is to use machinery to excavate and
transport truckloads of material to a
custom-built structure.
Workers would sort through material
by hand as it moves along a conveyor
belt.
The committee said health risks or
hazards, including asbestos, can be
mitigated at the site, which is owned by
Waste Connections of Canada.
Cambria Harris said the families
have been through a long, emotional
fight — with a trial still ahead — after
police and governments declined to
conduct or lead a search.
Several rallies, marches and road
blockades have been held to escalate
calls for landfill searches and more sup-
ports amid a national crisis of missing
and slain Indigenous women and girls.
The Harris and Myran families set
up camps outside the Brady Road land-
fill and Canadian Museum for Human
Rights.
Before being ousted in the October
election, the former Progressive Con-
servative government refused to fund a
search, saying it would not put workers
at risk without a guarantee of finding
remains.
Cambria Harris and family advo-
cate Robyn Johnston have filed human
rights complaints against the Tory
party over election campaign ads that
opposed a search, and the Manitoba
government for “refusing” to make
funds and resources available to search
the Prairie Green and Brady Road land-
fills.
chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca
TOP NEWS
A3 SATURDAY MARCH 23, 2024 ● ASSOCIATE EDITOR, NEWS: STACEY THIDRICKSON 204-697-7292 ● CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
Grand Chief Cathy Merrick and Cambria Harris, daughter of Morgan Harris, answer questions Friday after the provincial and federal governments announced funding for a search.
$40M promised for landfill search
CHRIS KITCHING
Accused serial killer
to stand trial in April
;