‘100 per cent Indigenous:’ New mask factory on Alberta reserve to employ band members
EDMONTON — What business school teaches in four years, Jacob Faithful says he learned in four months.
The Alberta man from the Frog Lake First Nations says he’s worked through several headaches that come with starting a business during a pandemic and will soon be opening the first mask manufacturing plant on a Canadian reserve that is fully owned and operated by Indigenous people.
“We already spent enough money to get the machine imported from China to here in Canada. And then on Feb. 22, we’re going to start making our own masks in Frog Lake,” Faithful, 42, said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
Frog Lake First Nations is run by a band government about 200 kilometres northeast of Edmonton. Born and raised on the reserve, Faithful says life hasn’t been easy for him and for the community’s approximately 1,800 other members.