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On Saturday, Lac La Ronge Indian Band will begin scouring the cemetery site with ground-penetrating radar in search of unmarked graves associated with the residential school.
Lac La Ronge Indian Band chief Tammy Cook-Searson discusses a potential $17-million in government funding for an a addictions center in La Ronge. (Kayle Neis/Saskatoon StarPhoenix) Kayle Neis ...
The Lac La Ronge Indian Band is the fourth known Indigenous group in Saskatchewan to recently begin searching for unmarked graves associated with a residential school.
A section of La Ronge Avenue will be closed in both directions between Cuthand Street and Backlund Street on July 8-10 from 9 ...
Members of the Lac La Ronge Indian Band (LLRIB) have voted to approve a $601.5 million settlement agreement with the federal government.
Lac La Ronge Indian Band is adopting a vaccine passport for its employees and facilities. “As a band, we continue to work together to actively promote immunizations.
The barrier on the south side of the tri-community will be removed on Thursday at 8 a.m., the same time the evacuation order will lift.
Nicole GoldsworthyLocal Journalism Initiative ReporterSaskToday.ca​LA RONGE — The Lac La Ronge Indian Band is charting its own path to healing with a th ...
Lac La Ronge Indian Band members are preparing to unearth the truth of the former Lac La Ronge Indian Residential School’s possible unmarked graves.
Since evacuees have returned to their home communities, leadership with Air Ronge, La Ronge and the Lac La Ronge Indian Band ...
The Lac La Ronge Indian Band (LLRIB) is working to ensure urban members stay connected with their traditional, land-based ways of life.
The old cemetery behind the long-destroyed Lac La Ronge Indian Residential School sits on a dip in a hill just west of downtown La Ronge, Sask. While the site has some headstones and markings here and ...