TB

Theresa Boyce

Manager Of Community Infrastructure at Kwikwetlem First Nation

Theresa Boyce is an experienced professional with a strong background in community infrastructure and project management. Currently serving as the Manager of Community Infrastructure at Kwikwetlem First Nation since January 2019, Theresa coordinates and communicates with internal project stakeholders on various issues related to cost, scope, and scheduling. Previous roles include Project Manager and Regional Housing Officer at Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada, where Theresa contributed to the Lands and Economic Directorate, and positions at Home Depot, Comox Pacific Express, and Canim Lake Band. Education includes a Housing Manager Certificate from Vancouver Island University, a Forestry Technician Certificate from British Columbia Institute of Technology, and an Associate of General Arts from Nicola Valley Institute of Technology.

Links


Org chart

No direct reports

Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices

This person is not in any offices


Kwikwetlem First Nation

The kʷikʷəƛ̓əm people are the First Peoples of the Coquitlam Watershed in British Columbia. Archaeology findings have confirmed continuous occupation of ancestral lands for at least 10,000 years, since the last ice age. The Cities of Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam take their name after our people. The kʷikʷəƛ̓əm people are descended from ancestors who were renowned spirit and winter dancers, skilled canoe builders, and master sturgeon and salmon fishers. The rich culture and history of the kʷikʷəƛ̓əm people is based on ancient Coast Salish laws and protocols which granted us the responsibility to govern our territory in accordance with our customary laws. Our land is central to every aspect of their life, and today, as in the past, we are guided by teachings to responsibly use and care for our lands, waters and all that is above and below. kʷikʷəƛ̓əm draw our name “Red Fish Up the River” from an early spring sockeye salmon run that once flourished in the Coquitlam River and that sustained our people for food for thousands of years before the Coquitlam Dam was built. Our name reflects the strong connection our people have always had to our community and the lands and waters which surround us and that have sustained us for thousands of years. We draw our sovereignty from the Creator, the siʔém̓ x̌é∙l̕s (transformers), and šxʷʔə́y̓ə́m (deep-time histories), which granted us the responsibility to govern our territory in accordance with our customary laws which are based on Coast Salish traditions. We honour all lands and beings, sustenance and spiritual, that live within, rely upon, and migrate through our territory.


Employees

11-50

Links