March 5th, 2026

Fact File: What the Musqueam agreements mean for private property owners in B.C.

By Canadian Press on March 5, 2026.

VANCOUVER — Ottawa this week published details of an agreement recognizing the Musqueam First Nation’s Aboriginal title within much of Vancouver. The news prompted claims on social media that Canada had ceded Vancouver properties to the Musqueam, but experts in Indigenous rights law, as well as the federal minister responsible and the First Nation, say the agreement does not transfer private property.

THE CLAIM

This week, the federal government released details of an agreement with the Musqueam First Nation, which recognizes its Aboriginal title within an area that includes much of Vancouver. News of the agreement caused a flurry of confusion and anger on social media.

“Mark Carney GAVE away the CITY of VANCOUVER. 2 MILLION people’s HOMES Land Title GONE” reads a post on the X platform, formerly Twitter, with around 220,000 views.

Another X post reads, “Canada has just SIGNED an agreement with the Musqueam First Nation giving them PROPERTY TITLE RIGHTS to MOST OF VANCOUVER!”

Some posts claimed Canada “handed over” control of Vancouver to the Musqueam.

THE FACTS


The agreement is one of three signed by the band and the federal government on Feb. 20, with the other two agreements concerning marine management and fisheries.

The rights recognition agreement recognizes Musqueam Aboriginal rights “including title within their traditional territory” and creates a framework for “nation-to-nation relations within Canada,” according to a federal government news release.

Dwight Newman, a law professor at the University of Saskatchewan whose expertise includes Indigenous rights law, said the agreement contains a clause that specifically separates it from a treaty or land claims agreement.

“That’s a significant clause, because it means that it doesn’t become constitutionally entrenched like a treaty or land claims agreement effectively does,” he said.

Newman said the agreement sets the stage for future negotiations between the Musqueam and the federal government by laying out what the dispute resolution process would look like in those negotiations.

Darwin Hanna, a lawyer with the Vancouver-based firm Callison & Hanna who focuses on Indigenous rights and governance, said the agreement “provides for good faith negotiations to address Musqueam rights and title.”

He said the agreement recognizes Musqueam Aboriginal title rights, rather then declaring them, and doesn’t involve the transfer of private property — which would fall under provincial jurisdiction, not federal.

“Nothing within the agreement at this stage specifically transfers any private property,” Newman said. However, “there isn’t a clause within the agreement that excludes private property from being part of that recognized title.”

That could stop the federal government from arguing against a Musqueam claim to private property if that ended up in the courts — but the agreement is meant to avoid such a scenario by outlining the negotiation process.

“In a sense, though, the Musqueam are using the existence of a possible claim against private property to negotiate about arrangements from the federal government to respond to their land claim,” Newman said.

Hanna said the agreement lays the groundwork for reconciliation by addressing Aboriginal title rights.

“In B.C. you have the Crown, who has received the benefits of the territories without the full inclusion of these nations. So you have a process for reconciliation to have land-back opportunities for nations to ensure they are able to be involved, through governance and other arrangements, over their ancestral lands,” he said.

SHOULD B.C. PROPERTY OWNERS BE WORRIED?

Federal Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Rebecca Alty said in a statement Monday that the agreements do not affect private property. “Suggestions otherwise are false,” she said.

Musqueam First Nation echoed that point in its own statement Monday, citing comments by Chief Wayne Sparrow in December saying the First Nation’s goal is a “partnership and relationship with our neighbours, not trying to take away our neighbours’ private property.”

Newman stressed the agreement has not taken away private property, adding the language about the government “handing over” Vancouver to the Musqueam is an “exaggeration” and inaccurate.

While the agreement doesn’t directly affect private B.C. property owners, Newman said a landmark court ruling last August involving the Cowichan Nation has heightened people’s concern.

That ruling awarded Aboriginal title to the Cowichan over a swath of property in Richmond, B.C., sparking concerns about the impact on private land ownership.

Newman said Ottawa could have avoided some of the negative response to the Musqueam agreement if it had done a better job communicating the details.

“But to be clear, the response comes out of mistaken impressions about the effect of this agreement, even while there are some background risks to private property in British Columbia,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 5, 2026.

Marissa Birnie, The Canadian Press

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