Members of Pessamit Innu community celebrate the refusal of an agreement with Quebec
MONTREAL — The Innu of Pessamit voted on Sunday to reject an agreement proposed by Hydro-Québec and the Government of Quebec, which could have settled longstanding legal disputes and paved the way to new energy projects.
Sixty-three per cent of voters rejected the agreement, which had sparked controversy in Pessamit and the broader Innu nation, both for its contents and for the short period of time between the announcement of the deal and the referendum.
“One thing is for sure, it’s that the community wants to keep the land, and to stop any development by Hydro-Québec,” said Ha’dishrayen Gros-Louis, a Wendat-Innu political science student who was in Pessamit for the referendum.
The “New Relationship Agreement on Energy Development,” also known as the Aishkat Agreement, included the payment of more than $2.535 billion over 50 years, as well as other sums, to the community of over 4,000 people located just under 60 km southwest of Baie-Comeau, in the Côte-Nord region of Quebec.


