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Terms of Use and Accessibility Terms of use: All materials published or otherwise accessible through the website and e-learning courses are protected intellectual property. You agree to abide by all additional copyright notices and restrictions contained in any content. You are free to use any of the workbooks and template materials for you and your business only. Accessibility: Next Gen Grit is committed to making its online presence as accessible as possible for everyone. We are currently reviewing all aspects of our website and are actively working to ensure that the existing site and our future online activities meet appropriate guidelines and standards on web accessibility issues.

Land acknowledgement I acknowledge that I live and work on the land that is part of treaty 14 with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. On August 2, 1805, the British Crown negotiated with the Mississaugas to acquire 70,784 acres of land in a strip of land six miles deep from the Lake Ontario shoreline and stretching between the western boundary of the Toronto Purchase lands and the western boundary of the Brant Tract lands. Chief Quinipeno, the spokesperson for the Mississaugas at the negotiations, spoke of the reluctance of the people to part with their lands, “…It is hard for us to give away more land: The young men and women have found fault with so much having been sold before; it is true we are poor, the women say we will be worse, if we part with any more,…” The Mississaugas received £1000 in trade goods and the sole right of fishing at 12 and 16 Mile Creeks and the Credit River with land on their flats. The agreement between the Mississaugas and Crown was ratified as the Head of the Lake Treaty, No. 14 in 1806.

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