Our logo was produced and designed especially for the Prince George Treaty Advisory Committee.

It depicts a popular and traditional symbol in this region of a frog. Many of the Carrier bands and nations in the Central Interior are represented by different crests. The frog crest is used to represent traditional clans.

Dulkw'ah to the Nak'azdli and Tl'azt'en people near Fort St. James, tsadli to the Sai'kuz people near Vanderhoof, the frog is an almost universal symbol in this region.

Sitting within a circle the frog represents the close and growing links between aboriginal and non-aboriginal communities within the Central Interior. The distinct blue, yellow and red colors of the drawing are the colors of British Columbia.

The ten yellow dots or spots on the frog's back relate to the ten community members of the Prince George Treaty Advisory Committee. Elected from the communities of Valemount, McBride, Prince George, Mackenzie, Vanderhoof, Fort St. James, Fraser Lake, Burns Lake and the regional districts of Bulkley Nechako and Fraser-Fort George, the members of the PGTAC bring municipal and local government interests to the treaty table. Committee members are active in treaty talks with the Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, the Cheslatta First Nation, the Lheidli T'enneh Nation and the Yekooche First Nation.

Created by local Lheidli T'enneh artist Phillippe LaFreniere the original sketch rests in the offices in the Regional District of Fraser Fort George in Prince George.