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Six Nations Residents Say No to Pot Farm!
In Six Nations, Canada's most populous Indigenous reserve, a massive cannabis grow operation has become the center of a heated community dispute. What began quietly has sparked deep concern among residents, igniting fears over land use, transparency, and safety in a place already navigating the complex relationship between sovereignty and regulation.
Nancy Porter, a lifelong resident of the reserve, has been at the forefront of the opposition. She says she never received formal notice about the cannabis grow-op, now known as Legacy Farms, until she saw dozens of greenhouses being erected behind her family homestead—land once used for traditional farming. "This is where my mother raised her ten children," Porter said. "Now strangers have reshaped the fields I roamed as a child."
According to Porter, the rapid development disrupted natural drainage, causing repeated flooding on her property. Despite reaching out to the Six Nations Band Council and submitting her concerns in writing, she says she never received answers. "No information was given. Just silence," she explained.
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