http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder-bay
Wawatay Native Communications Society is in financial trouble and has laid off most of its staff. The organization runs a radio network serving more than 50 isolated First Nations, a tri-lingual newspaper, and television production studios serving First Nations in northern Ontario.
The board of directors is holding emergency meetings in an attempt to save the nearly 40-year-old institution.
The president of Wawatay’s board, Mike Metatawabin, said if a solution can’t be found immediately, the network may shut down. Wawatay must find a new direction if it’s going to survive — and it will take the attention, support and cooperation of all the communities to save Wawatay, he added.
“It’s like milking a cow, but now the cow is not producing any milk. But people are still kicking at it, saying, ”C’mon, we need more.’ But nobody has fed the cow. Nobody has nourished the cow.”
Wawatay’s mandate is to promote, preserve and enhance the languages and cultures of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. It was created in 1974 by elders who saw the need for cultural preservation as well as media adaptation.