Tensions are escalating in Caledonia where new blockades have been erected.
A hydro tower was laid Monday morning across Argyle Street in Caledonia, near the Douglas Creek Estates, the subject of an ongoing dispute since February 28, 2006.
CHCH News reported early Monday afternoon that discussions were underway about re-opening Argyle Street and the Highway 6 bypass.
There has been a suggestion it's because two native protestors were arrested in Brantford Saturday, for violating an injunction banning them from construction sites.
There had been some minor stone-throwing going on, but nothing serious.
CHCH News ran tape of a local resident yelling at OPP officers: "We have to live. Let's go, move it! If you were a real man you would go back there and tell them to move it. F---ing coward! You're nothing but a coward."
Resident Merlyn Kinrade: "These boys and girls in blue choose not to do their job. They enforce the law if a non-native breaks the law but if it's a native then they must call the RML team to respond to that and try to settle these people down. Now if I were to close a provincial highway, or a main street in any community, I would be known as a terrorist and I would be dealt with as a terrorist. That is a terrorist act that they're committing on the Queen's highway, which is the Highway 6 bypass. Where do we go from here? The only way this will ever get resolved is the law is applied equally, regardless of race."
Many locals renewed their call for the federal government to get involved, and for soldiers to be sent in.
A 14 year old boy has been arrested and charged with mischief after a woman trying to cross the barricade had her car radio antenna broken off.