
AFN national chief calls outside probe of her workplace conduct 'colonial' and 'confrontational'
CBC
Assembly of First Nations National Chief RoseAnne Archibald claims the workplace misconduct investigation probing her treatment of staff is following a "colonial path" because its non-Indigenous investigators could "demonize" Indigenous cultural practices.
The Assembly of First Nations (AFN) launched an external investigation of Archibald's conduct last spring after four of her senior staff and the AFN's outgoing CEO accused her of bullying and harassment.
In a memo sent on Jan. 26 to chiefs-in-assembly, Archibald called the probe a "colonial legal process" that distracts from the AFN's real work.
"I have met the investigators and am concerned that they're non-Indigenous and may not have a grounding in our traditional practices and ways of being which could easily lead us down a colonial path of having this process demonize our cultural practices," she wrote in the memo, which was obtained by CBC News.
"This kind of non-Indigenous investigation is antagonistic, confrontational, and moves us further away from bringing healing and harmony to our working relationships."
In the memo, Archibald accused the investigators of withholding information from her and her legal counsel — such as which sections of the Canada Labour Code and the AFN's own workplace personnel and ethics codes she's alleged to have breached.
"I'm not being given access to what I need to defend myself against these allegations," Archibald wrote.
Archibald also criticized the investigation's terms of reference, which she said overlook her alleged refusal to approve a payout of than $1 million to the four staff who filed complaints against her and what she calls the "toxic and fear-based management practices" at the AFN.
The memo, labelled "confidential," was sent in response to a video presented at the last AFN Special Chiefs Assembly in Ottawa on Dec. 6 by Raquel Chisholm, a partner with law firm Emond Harnden. Chisholm was hired by the the AFN to investigate the allegations against Archibald.
Chisholm told the chiefs-in-assembly that Archibald hadn't made herself available for an interview, despite repeated requests to sit down with her between August and December 2022. Chisholm said Archibald cited concerns about the fairness of the process.
Archibald said in the memo that neither she nor members of her legal team were allowed to view Chisholm's video before it was played to the chiefs-in-assembly. She said that prevented her from providing a detailed response.
Archibald said she's been targeted by complaints because she has pursued allegations of corruption within the AFN, which receives tens of millions of dollars annually from the federal government.
The AFN told CBC News it does not comment on human resource matters and refused to comment on Archibald's memo.
In her email to chiefs-in-assembly, Archibald included a chronology of events involving the investigators and David Shiller, her legal counsel. Shiller has suggested that the probe is a "political exercise meant to discredit and harm the national chief," says the memo.