Skatin

Skatin
Skookumchuk
Community
Skatin First Nations
Nickname: 
Skatin Nation
Skatin is located in British Columbia
Skatin
Coordinates: 50°4′0″N 122°41′6″W / 50.06667°N 122.68500°W / 50.06667; -122.68500
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
RegionFraser Valley
Skatin First Nations562
Government
 • TypeElected Band Council
 • Governing bodyBand Council
 • ChiefWilliams, Patrick
Population
 (2011)
 • Total
105
Time zonePST
 • Summer (DST)PDT
Postal code
V0N
Area codeN/A
Websitewww.inshuckch.com/skatin.html

Skatin is a community of under 100 persons in Skatin First Nations,[2] aka the Skatin Nations,[3] a Band government of the larger Band of the In-SHUCK-ch Nation, part of the St'at'imc people who are also referred to as Lower Stl'atl'imx. Skatin, the official new name, reverts to the traditional pre-colonial/pre-Columbian name. The alternate past name still commonly used by outsiders, Skookumchuck, is the St'at'imcets version of the Chinook Jargon Skookumchuck, meaning Strong Waters, i.e. rapids. The town site is 4 km south of T'sek Hot Spring (alt. spelling T'sik Hot Spring), formerly named both Saint Agnes Well and Skookumchuck Hot Springs. The community is 28 km south of the outlet of Lillooet Lake on the east side of the Lillooet River. It is approximately 75 km south of the town of Pemberton and the large reserve of the Lil'wat branch of the St'at'imc at Mount Currie, British Columbia. See Skatin First Nations for details about the complicated Band(s) structure.

Skatin is geographically an extension of both the Pemberton and Harrison Valleys, but by legal fiction is officially part of the Fraser Valley for Provincial and Federal administrative purposes.

  1. ^ Section 11 Band, Election System: Custom Electoral System
  2. ^ [1] Archived June 21, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "First Nation Detail". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2015-11-03.