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Métis Nation British Columbia Board Removes President Walter Mineault Over Alleged Misconduct

The board of directors of the Métis Nation British Columbia voted to remove president Walter Mineault following allegations of breaching fiduciary duty. An election will be held to select a replacement, and vice president Melanie Allard has been appointed as interim president. The decision followed an independent review of an investigation into Mineault's conduct.

Cbc
1 source·Apr 12, 7:55 PM(1 day ago)·2m read
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Métis Nation British Columbia Board Removes President Walter Mineault Over Alleged MisconductUnknown authorUnknown author / Wikimedia (Public domain)
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The Métis Nation British Columbia (MNBC) board of directors voted to remove president Walter Mineault on April 9, 2026. The board stated that Mineault breached his fiduciary duty. An election will be held to replace him, with vice president Melanie Allard appointed as interim president.

The decision came after an independent review of Mineault's conduct. The review was based on an investigation by lawyer Robyn Gervais. Former judge Wally Oppal assessed Gervais's findings and recommended Mineault's dismissal.

Oppal's assessment detailed several allegations against Mineault. These included using his position to advance familial interests over MNBC's interests. One example involved pressuring staff to hire his brother's band.

Allegations of Misconduct The assessment stated that when the CEO declined due to conflict of interest, Mineault engaged in a 40-minute phone call where he yelled at, abused, and intimidated the CEO.

He threatened to publicly accuse her of bias against his family. Another allegation involved advocating for a resolution that benefited property partially owned by his third cousin, without disclosing the relationship to the board. Further allegations included directing a misogynistic slur at a female director and threatening to block her future travel approvals.

The assessment described a pattern of hostility, such as berating staff, swearing at directors, and publicly criticizing them during meetings. Mineault allegedly refused to approve board travel to punish directors involved in complaints against him.

Financial and Confidentiality Issues The assessment also noted financial overreach, including committing $10,000 in funding to the Prince George Métis Community Association without board approval.

Mineault allegedly disclosed confidential board deliberations on his personal Facebook page regarding a rent supplement program. A summary of the allegations was presented to Mineault during in-camera sessions of the Métis Nation Governing Assembly on February 28 and March 1, 2026. Oppal wrote that the board should dismiss Mineault, noting that he chose not to respond to the allegations.

The assessment emphasized the board's conflict of interest, as many directors were complainants or victims. Mineault had been suspended in August 2025 but reinstated in December 2025. , and declined an interview with CBC News, stating he needed to consult legal counsel.

The press release wished Mineault well in his future endeavors. The independent recommendation aimed to preserve the board's integrity. MNBC represents Métis citizens in British Columbia, focusing on governance, rights, and community services.

Story Timeline

4 events
  1. April 9, 2026

    MNBC board votes to remove president Walter Mineault and appoints Melanie Allard as interim president.

    1 sourceCbc
  2. February 28 and March 1, 2026

    Summary of allegations presented to Mineault during Métis Nation Governing Assembly sessions.

    1 sourceCbc
  3. December 2025

    Mineault reinstated as president after August 2025 suspension.

    1 sourceCbc
  4. August 2025

    Mineault suspended from role as MNBC president.

    1 sourceCbc

Potential Impact

  1. 01

    Election process for new MNBC president will determine future leadership direction.

  2. 02

    Interim leadership under Melanie Allard may affect ongoing governance decisions.

  3. 03

    Allegations could lead to legal proceedings if Mineault consults counsel.

  4. 04

    Board integrity measures may influence handling of future complaints.

  5. 05

    MNBC community services might face temporary disruptions during transition.

Transparency Panel

Sources cross-referenced1
Framing risk0/100 (low)
Confidence score70%
Synthesized bySubstrate AI (grok-4-fast-non-reasoning)
Word count387 words
PublishedApr 12, 2026, 7:55 PM
Bias signals removed3 across 2 outlets
Signal Breakdown
Editorializing 1Loaded 1Framing 1

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