Long Plain First Nation

Long Plain First Nation
Band No. 287
PeopleOjibway and Dakota
TreatyTreaty 1[1]
Headquarters111 Yellowquill Trail East
Long Plain Reserve No.6
Box 430 Portage la Prairie, MB, R1N 3B7
Land
Main reserveLong Plain Reserve No. 6
Other reserve(s)
Keeshkeemaquah Reserve and Madison Indian Reserve #1
Land area44 km2
Population (2016)
On reserve1,232
Total population4,658 (2023)
Government
ChiefDavid Meeches[2]
Council
Marvin Daniels, Garnet Meeches, Randy Merrick, and Liz Merrick[2]
Tribal Council
Dakota Ojibway Tribal Council
Website
lpband.ca

The Long Plain First Nation (Ojibwe: Gaa-ginooshkodeyaag)[3] is an Ojibway and Dakota First Nations band government in Manitoba, Canada. (It also hosts a small number of Cree people as well.)

Situated on a land base of 44 km2 (10,800 acres) primarily located in the Central Plains Region of Manitoba,[4] its reserve lands include the Long Plain Reserve #6, the Keeshkeemaquah Reserve near Portage La Prairie, and the Madison Indian Reserve #1—the first urban reserve in Winnipeg.[5]

It is located to the southwest of Portage la Prairie along the Assiniboine River. It lies between the Rural Municipality of Portage la Prairie and the Rural Municipality of South Norfolk, and also borders another band's reserve, that of the Dakota Plains First Nation.

The current chief of the Long Plain First Nation is David Meeches, who was elected in December 2023, returning to the post after his tenure ended in 2013.[2] Meeches replaced Kyra Wilson, who was the second female Chief in Long Plain history.[6]

  1. ^ "Long Plain First Nation » Treaty One Development Corporation". Treaty1.ca. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "David Meeches elected as Chief of Long Plain First Nation". Portage Online. 8 December 2023. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  3. ^ Andy Thomas Thomas, Florence Paynter. The Significance of Creating First Nation Traditional Names Maps. Manitoba First Nations Education Resource Centre Inc. https://mfnerc.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/The-Significance-of-Creating-First-Nation-Traditional-Names-Maps.pdf
  4. ^ "Community Info". Long Plain First Nation. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
  5. ^ "Long Plain First Nation". Lpband.ca. Retrieved 2021-08-16.
  6. ^ "Chief & Council announces plans for new Long Plain First Nation Wellness & Education Centre". C3b.264.myftpupload.com. 10 August 2020. Retrieved 11 November 2021.

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