:
Colleagues, I'm going to call this meeting to order.
Good morning. Welcome to meeting number 132 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Indigenous and Northern Affairs.
As always, I want to start by acknowledging that we are gathered on the ancestral and unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people and by expressing gratitude that we're able to do the important work of this committee on lands they've stewarded since time immemorial.
Colleagues, we have a lot of work to do, given the House order that was passed on Tuesday. The second report of our committee was recommitted to our committee with a view to studying the economic and antireconciliatory barriers posed by fraudulent bids and applications for procurement opportunities set aside for indigenous businesses, including those from non-indigenous-owned companies.
We are ordered to order certain ministers, officials and private citizens to appear, while we will also have at least four meetings to invite witnesses to provide testimony to this committee for that purpose. This is all before we break for holidays on December 17, which is less than a month away.
Accordingly, I want all parties to submit their witness lists to the clerk by noon on Friday, November 29, for at least the four meetings we will be having on this topic.
However, as this order appropriately confirms, the first priority of this committee is going to be passing Bill .
You may ask how we are going to do all of this in less than a month. The order has given our committee, and me as chair, additional access to House resources to hold meetings, so there will be additional meetings and they will be longer. I'm currently seeking to secure those resources.
This is going to be an effort, and it's going to take some sacrifice from all of us to get this done. I've tried to accommodate all members of this committee, but going forward, I just want to mention that it is going to take some sacrifice to get this done, because we've had around eight hours of clause-by-clause consideration of this bill so far, and we're less than 30% done.
We've done our due diligence, and I don't want to rush you, but I ask that you try to limit unnecessary interventions. Otherwise, we might get very sick of the premium coffee that we have in our committee room here. Also, I just want to mention that today is going to be audio only, so there will be no clips to be had today either.
Colleagues, let's pass this important piece of legislation to ensure that first nations have clean drinking water for generations to come.
Pursuant to the order of reference of Wednesday, June 5, 2024, the committee resumes consideration of Bill , an act respecting water, source water, drinking water, waste water and related infrastructure on first nations land.
To help us with the clause-by-clause consideration of Bill , I would like to welcome our witnesses back today.
We have Nelson Barbosa, director general, community infrastructure branch, Department of Indigenous Services. We also have Rebecca Blake, acting director, legislation, engagement and regulations, Department of Indigenous Services. From the Department of Justice, we have Douglas Fairbairn, senior counsel.
I want to remind all members that the amendments are confidential and that subamendments are to be shared electronically or on paper in both official languages and sent to the clerk for distribution.
With that, let's get back to where we were on clause-by-clause consideration, starting with NDP-37. I will open the floor back up to Ms. Idlout accordingly.
:
[
Member spoke in Inuktitut, interpreted as follows:]
Thank you.
Yesterday, the national chief contacted me to ask me to remove their amendments due to the time it is taking to amend Bill . I respect the will of the AFN and I respectfully withdraw those amendments. I will, however, keep the amendments submitted by independent first nations out of respect for their jurisdiction over their lands, territories and resources.
I will be removing these amendments: NDP-37, NDP-42, NDP-43, NDP-46, NDP-48, NDP-49, NDP-57, NDP-58, NDP-61, NDP-63, NDP-66, NDP-75, NDP-79, NDP-2 and NDP-3.
:
All right. I'm going to slow down.
They are NDP-41, NDP-54, NDP-73, NDP-37, NDP-42, NDP-43, NDP-46, NDP-48, NDP-49, NDP-57, NDP-58, NDP-61, NDP-63, NDP-66, NDP-75, NDP-79 and, back at the beginning, NDP-2 and NDP-3.
Thank you very much, Ms. Idlout, for sharing that.
With that, I guess the next amendment we have is—
:
Respectfully, the time wasted is a result of the fact that opposition members have tasked the committee with the study. If they're going to call it “wasted”, they can look in the mirror, because it's they who have made the decision to send this back.
It names “the Minister”. The minister is .
Nonetheless, to Mr. Lemire's point, why don't we get interpretation from the clerks? I think the Clerk of the House, Mr. Janse, can give us his interpretation.
However, it's moot at the moment because we're not dealing with that right now, are we? Why don't we just get on with Bill , and then we can get an analysis that will tell us whether or not it's or , and we go from there.
:
I don't know if I should wait until you've said your piece.
To Mr. Carr's point, I don't think we need opinions from the Clerk of the House. I think the House is pretty clear that it was , considering that he has been at the core of this whole issue by co-owning a company, which has bid on projects or contracts, that's claiming to be wholly indigenous-owned when clearly that's not the case.
Obviously it was that the committee and the House wanted. We would expect that it would be he who has been ordered to appear, given the fact that when the motion was passed, he was in fact the minister named in the motion.
:
Just for the record, I hope Ms. Idlout will correct what she just said about taking a big chunk of money. What contract was awarded?
I think members have to be very careful about skirting the line of what's true and what's not. There are allegations, and I accept that, but to say that Mr. Boissonnault took a big chunk of money, I'd like to understand—perhaps later on, not now—from the member what she is referring to, because that's just simply false. It hasn't been proven anywhere and it's not becoming of members to be creating falsehoods.
There are allegations. The allegations are serious and they need to be looked at, but to suggest that a large chunk of money was taken, which in fact is not proven, I think is something that should be withdrawn from the table.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This headline is from Global News, August 22, 2024:
Boissonault's former company awarded federal contract in potential conflict of interest
Employment Minister Randy Boissonault's former medical company won a federal contract while he was in office and co-owned the business.
That is, I believe, what Ms. Idlout was referring to, Chair.
At the same time, I'm on side with the Bloc and the NDP. If there are games to be played here and we have attend, I don't think that goes to the spirit of the House order. I don't think it would be very responsible to go against that. I would like to severely stress that we stick to the House order. It's whom the House determined needs to appear, and who is ordered to appear, along with several other witnesses. That's whom we expect to be in that seat. Otherwise, it would be unacceptable to us and, I believe, the other opposition parties.
If we want to continue this, I hope the chair might allow for some clarification that he will, in fact—through his team—be calling Randy Boissonault.
We would like to know that right now, if possible. Then we can get back to Bill .
:
Colleagues, I'm starting up, and I'm going to say something here.
I've had a chance to confer with the clerk and counsel here. I very much understand what the spirit of this is, to Mr. Schmale's point. It was meant to invite the former minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Official Languages. Obviously, that's changed now.
In any event, because of privilege.... I've just had a chance to review the green book in chapter 20, page 282, to this effect—
A voice: It's page 982.
The Chair: I'm sorry. It's page 982.
It says that a standing committee cannot order a member of the House of Commons or a senator to appear, which is not preventing us from inviting them to appear. I would very much encourage the committee to invite Mr. Boissonnault to appear as part of this committee, because that was what this order is all about. Given the way that it is listed and given the precedents that we've looked into from previous committees looking at this, it is as it is written, and that would be the current .
The committee can challenge the ruling here, but even if this were to be overruled, we still don't have the ability to order Mr. Boissonnault to appear, because of privilege and the limits of our abilities on committee. That's my ruling on this.
I see there are a couple of hands up.
I will go first to Mr. Battiste, then Mr. Schmale and then Mr. Shields.
In the hope of getting on to the first nations clean water legislation, which I think is the most important thing to indigenous communities right now and the most important thing to first nations leaders right now, on our side we're willing to use the strongest legal language possible that can either compel, order or invite Mr. Boissonnault to attend. We will agree with that. Whatever is the strongest wording possible that we have as a committee, we will agree with.
We're not here trying to stall or protect; we're here to get to the first nations clean water legislation, for which we have additional resources today, and we are agreeable to the strongest language possible from this committee for what the opposition parties are saying.
I'm hoping that with our agreement to the strongest language legally possible for a committee to compel Mr. Boissonnault to come to this committee and answer questions, as was the intent of this.... We're more than happy to do that as long as we can get to first nations clean water without continuous delays from talking about the motion that we voted on in the House of Commons.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I appreciate the opportunity to bring this motion back. Again, it's based on the House order and your ruling earlier. Please confirm the issue, Mr. Chair, with a quick nod, if you could. It's that the Minister of Employment has changed. Obviously, our priority is to have , but it's your ruling that will be attending instead. We'll see Minister Petitpas Taylor very soon, then.
In the meantime, per the conversation prior to our taking a quick suspension, the main issue is getting to this committee to answer questions about his co-ownership of this company and the applications made for government contracts while claiming indigenous status when he was not actually indigenous himself.
I'd like to move the motion, and I believe there will be a subamendment to that motion.
It is:
That the committee report to the House that the MP for Edmonton Centre appear before the committee for two hours independently by Friday, December 6, 2024, and that the report be tabled by the chair in the House as soon as possible and no later than Monday, November 25, 2024.
:
I think the first nations clean water legislation should take priority.
There have been some conversations, and I think everyone is on board with an amendment: After “December 6”, add “or immediately following the completion and reporting back of Bill to the House.”
That's the period. The clerks have told us that we can expect that from the end of line-by-line, when we're done with this in the House and with the amendments and translations, it will take no more than a week. It works with the calendar year we have and the motion as presented in the House, I believe.
That's the amendment. Do we need it in writing, or can we pass it by unanimous consent? After “December 6”, it's “or immediately following the completion and reporting back of Bill to the House.”
:
Thanks for moving that amendment, Mr. Battiste. It looks like there's unanimous agreement in the committee.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: The motion presented by Mr. Schmale is amended.
Is there any debate on the motion as amended? Is there agreement around the table for that to pass?
(Motion as amended agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
Some hon. members: Hear, hear!
The Chair: That's great.
With that, let's get back to the task at hand and continue the clause-by-clause consideration of Bill .
(On clause 19)
The Chair: We were about to consider amendment BQ-12.
I will open up the floor.
[Translation]
Go ahead, Mr. Lemire.
Seeing that there is unanimous consent here, we can go back to the consideration of NDP-37.
First we'll start with debate.
Is there any debate on NDP-37?
There is not. We can go to a vote shortly, then.
Monsieur Lemire, we passed a unanimous consent motion to return to considering NDP-37, as it was withdrawn. We have unanimous consent to reconsider it, and we're going to a vote.
Shall NDP-37 carry?
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
Essentially, the purpose of our amendment is to enable first nations to analyze their data in order to obtain the best possible assurances for their community's infrastructure, which is important. We know that access to any data is very difficult for first nations, be it their medical data, insurance data or other data. It's important for first nations to be able to have data about their own populations.
That's not possible currently. I sincerely believe that this legislation would allow first nations to have better access to data, and therefore better governance. In addition, first nations digital sovereignty would make it possible to develop more affordable insurance products and improve asset management, among other things.
It should also be mentioned that it's not a matter of personal information, but of access to data, which is fundamental.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Lemire.
[English]
I'm not seeing any more interventions, so let's go to a vote.
(Subamendment agreed to; yeas 6; nays 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Amendment as amended agreed to: yeas 6; nays 5 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 19 as amended agreed to on division)
The Chair: This takes us to new clause 19.1 and NDP-38.
I will open the floor to Ms. Idlout.
Because it's my understanding that we're televised now, I'm going to repeat what I said earlier, before I start on amendment NDP-38.
Regarding the amendment process for Bill , the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations contacted me to ask me to remove their amendments due to the time it is taking to amend Bill . I respect the will of the Assembly of First Nations and respectfully withdraw those amendments. I will, however, keep the amendments submitted by Independent First Nations out of respect for their jurisdiction over their lands, territories and resources.
The NDP amendment numbers that I'm removing are NDP-42, NDP-43, NDP-46, NDP-48, NDP-49, NDP-57, NDP-58, NDP-61, NDP-63, NDP-66, NDP-75, NDP-79, NDP-2 and NDP-3.
Regarding the next amendment, NDP-38 was submitted by the British Columbia Assembly of First Nations.
It reads as follows:
That Bill C-61 be amended by adding after line 32 on page 12 the following new clause:
19.1 If affected First Nation governing bodies were afforded a meaningful opportunity to collaborate in the policy development leading to the making of the regulations, the Governor in Council may make regulations providing for any matter relating to the application of this Act or respecting water services on First Nation lands.
Qujannamiik.
:
Thank you very much, Ms. Idlout.
I'm going to give a ruling on this amendment. The amendment attempts to create an obligation for financing that does not currently exist in the bill. House of Commons Procedure and Practice, third edition, states on page 772:
Since an amendment may not infringe upon the financial initiative of the Crown, it is inadmissible if it imposes a charge on the public treasury, or if it extends the objects or purposes or relaxes the conditions and qualifications specified in the royal recommendation.
In the opinion of the chair, the amendment proposes a new scheme that imposes a charge on the public treasury. Therefore, I rule the amendment inadmissible.
With that, I will move on. Before we move to CPC-2, I'll mention that CPC-2 seeks to introduce the concept of co-development, which also appears in CPC-3, CPC-4, CPC-6, CPC-9, CPC-10, and CPC-11. This concept of co-development appears in several amendments. I wanted to bring that to the attention of committee members.
With that, I'll open the floor to Mr. Melillo.
I'm happy to move CPC-2. I think, as you alluded to, co-development is an important aspect of this amendment. I think it's fairly straightforward. Clause 20 reads:
The Minister must consult and cooperate with First Nation governing bodies before making any recommendation under subsection 19(1).
CPC-2 aims to take it a step further to ensure that any such recommendation must be co-developed with those first nation governing bodies. The aim here is to ensure that first nation rights are being respected, that first nation voices are being heard. Obviously, this is a piece of legislation that the government has touted as co-developed, or close to being co-developed. We have heard conflicting reports on the accuracy of that statement, Mr. Chair, but we hope that introducing co-development in this process will help to rectify some of that and ensure that first nations are being heard on it.
I'll leave it there. Thank you.
I'll be quick, as I believe the NDP may be preparing a subamendment. I know I can't move a subamendment myself, but I would put on the record that I take no issue with it. I think that a subamendment would add strength, so if that's something that they're looking to do, I would encourage it.
In terms of responding to Mr. Battiste, he is right. According to clause 19, the Governor in Council may make a number of regulations, but even though that wording is not binding, the way I read it is that if the Governor in Council were to make such regulations, there must be consultation, co-operation and co-development. I think that's an important thing, even though the regulations may not come to fruition. If they do, I believe that first nations should be a part of that process.
Co-development, of course, is not mentioned in UNDRIP specifically, but the minister has used it quite a bit, and I think that it is in the spirit of this legislation.
I will leave it at that and look to my colleagues for any further comments.
:
Thanks for the question.
I won't reiterate conversations we've been having at this table for a while now.
We did talk about a protection zone being laws aligned between provinces, territories and first nations, a defined space. We talked about water moving from point A to point B. We've removed the concept of adjacency, although I think there are still provisions to follow.
The “connected to” term relates to.... We've talked about watersheds and rivers that flow and move, so it brings, I would say, some permanency to the concept that waters do flow and move. First nations are sometimes impacted by those watersheds, so it's less about being directly beside it; it's more about being part of an ecosystem of water that may impact a first nation.
I appreciate the answers we've had so far and the intention of this amendment.
I do have a few questions about the wording as well. In particular, I think “the Minister must consider” is vague and not necessarily binding.
On “how a protection zone is to be connected to First Nation lands”, which you just spoke about, Mr. Barbosa, when I read this and when I hear it, it sounds to me like it is maybe inadvertently placing some conditions on what a protection zone would be in terms of being connected specifically to first nation lands or perhaps not being connected to first nation lands. The minister has to figure out how that will be connected.
It just seems to me like it is perhaps inadvertently introducing some restrictions on what the protection zone could be.
Do you have any comments on that thought?
:
I know that there's been some concern expressed by both the Bloc and the Conservatives about protection zones being undefined. We agree that we need to ensure that we don't infringe on provincial jurisdiction, and that's why this extra sentence gives the clarity that the water has to be connected to a first nation, so it's not just all waters associated in the province that are a protection zone. There's actually a connection to that first nations community, whether it's drinking water or fishing.
I see this doing exactly what we've been asked by the Conservatives and the Bloc to consider doing, which is ensuring that when we're doing this, we're not covering all waters associated with that province but rather the ones that are connected to a first nations community.
In terms of drinking water sources, we've had cases of first nations' drinking water being poisoned in Nova Scotia or Alberta. What this hopes to do is give clarity by saying that only waters that are connected to first nations communities can be considered a protection zone.
I think that addresses some of the concerns that the Conservatives and the Bloc have raised. Would you say that's a somewhat reasonable reading of what this statement does?
:
Thank you Mr. Chair. I do appreciate the comments from Mr. Battiste and his efforts to try to get to consensus here. I guess I disagree a bit with the specific wording of this in what it.... I don't disagree with the intentions, but I'm not sure if the wording is quite sufficient.
I'd be curious how “connected” would be defined, versus “adjacency”. We've gone to lengths to remove “adjacency”. What is “connected”? I mean, water flows in many ways for great lengths. At what point would a river that runs through multiple provinces still be connected to a first nation or perhaps not connected to a first nation?
I think that creates some ambiguity. I don't think it's intended ambiguity on the part of the government, but it just concerns me that it could be the case.
Do you have thoughts on how “connected” would be defined? I hate to say “defined”, because we've been fighting about definitions for some time now, but I think it's an important point.
:
Thanks for the question.
Well, first off, it says “must consider”, not “defined”, so it's a part of the consideration of how the laws apply.
Yes, some rivers are very long. Some of the longest rivers in the world are in this country, and there are also sources of water that are quite small. I think the concept is that there must be—not to define a term with the term—a connection to that water in order for a law to be passed.
In the same way that exists in the provincial and territorial concept, the Province of Ontario cannot pass a law over waters in Alberta, because there's no connection to those lands or to that watershed. I think it's talking about aligning laws over a space that is permeable and connecting those to a first nation.
This does get complicated. I know of rivers that originate in the United States that would be connected to the Blackfoot Confederacy. They come through Canada and return to the United States.
In some water agreements, percentages of water are retained in one country, with an international agreement. The water use is retained in Canada. We also have water agreements from B.C. to Manitoba on the amount of water each province can retain from that river flow. We have a number of very complicated agreements and international agreements sitting out there that this would affect when you talk about connections. It's not as simple as you might suggest in this conversation. It's very complicated.
Those agreements on the international water that affect the Blackfoot Confederacy, for example.... On both sides of the border, that agreement is being.... They've spent 10 years renegotiating that particular agreement, because it's very complicated. It's not simple. When we say “connected”, it's not simple.
The headwaters of the Saskatchewan rivers come out of B.C. through the western provinces all the way to Hudson Bay. When we say “connect”, this is a lot of territory and a lot of....
There are agreements that provinces have on water usage and percentage, and across international borders. When you say “connect”, this is a red flag for me. It's a tough issue, not only between provinces but internationally.
I would agree with my colleague Mr. Shields.
In a previous committee meeting, I mentioned protection zones and how they would affect certain water bodies. In my riding, as an example, we have the Peace River. It goes from Alberta to B.C. and all the way up into the Northwest Territories, where it exits into the Arctic. Along the way, it affects many things—I used this example too, but I'll state it again—such as natural gas.
The reason we have a natural gas project on the west coast of B.C. is the natural gas from my riding. It only makes its way there because exploration has been done and production has happened, and they needed water to produce that natural gas. If we put a protection zone anywhere near the Peace River, it would affect any potential new development on natural gas.
Natural gas, by the way, is great for the environment in that it reduces emissions around the world, as long as we can get it to the world. Any kind of limitation that we put around that source water—that would be the Peace River or any water coming from the Peace River—would have some pretty dramatic effects, not just in the province of B.C., but in Alberta and, really, globally. That's how a simple piece of legislation can have some pretty severe impacts on any new development.
Lastly, I'd add to this statement that it affects first nations. A lot of first nations along the way have had economic prosperity and opportunity because of natural gas. If we're going to limit that as well.... Again, just a simple phrase—two words in a piece of government legislation—can have some wide and vast negative consequences.
Thank you.
Mr. Chair, I think we really have to be considerate of the impacts that waters, waterways and watersheds have, even though communities may be quite far away from projects, dams or anything of that nature that holds back water or reduces water.
I live in a community called Fort Providence. It's an indigenous community. It's the first community on the Mackenzie River. Two days ago, the Mackenzie River dropped so low that we can no longer pump water into our water plant. It's the first time in our history that we've had water levels drop so low. Our water levels have been dropping since they started holding back water at Site C. Whether that's the actual cause, I can't say for sure, but the timing is certainly coincidental.
When Site C was being built, we did not have one word of input on that project—not one. We were considered not connected. We're too far away. It didn't matter if it was indigenous voices trying to provide impact or the Government of Northwest Territories: We had no say.
Now our barges can't come up and down the river and water intakes are being affected, so I think we need to be able to make sure that projects that are on one side of the country don't affect something that's further downstream. We have to look at whole watersheds. We have to look at the whole flow of river systems when we talk about impacts and when we start talking about projects and their effects on others.
Thank you.
I'm going to refer to B.C. and the Columbia River and the agreement with the United States. This is hydrological. The amount of electricity that's created is a huge source of power within the Columbia River basin. That's another one that's an international treaty with the U.S.: the Columbia River. The amount of hydro power that's created is a piece to that.
There's another side to the dam argument. Recently, environmentalists in discussions and meetings that I've been in have talked about dams that have created a better environmental flow of water at a predicted rate that creates a better environment, predictably, along the river streams. I'm seeing information, then, from environmentalists who used to oppose dams and are now saying that they are a means of a healthier environment along the stream beds. I think there's some information out there that shows both sides of that.
I understand and realize what you're saying and the difficulty it creates. However, I'm just saying that there's some other information out there, as well, on the creation of dams both for power and for stream-flow consistency.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Shields.
I have a lot of thoughts on this, as someone who's practised in transboundary water management. Certainly the dams on the Columbia River were done for flood mitigation. However, among other things, damming did prevent the salmon runs from going upstream, so there are some very major ecological impacts. Actually, that treaty is now up for renegotiation, which will be very interesting with the new incoming administration.
In any event, that's neither here nor there.
I'm not seeing any more interventions, so let's go to a vote.
Shall G-5 carry? We're going to have a recorded division.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 7; nays 4)
The Chair: That takes us to CPC-4.
Go ahead, Mr. Melillo.
I'm happy to move CPC-4, which pertains to the discussion about protection zones and the regulations the minister must make.
Again, this is not a new concept, at least from the standpoint of our amendment. It's just ensuring that any such regulation must be co-developed with provinces, territories and first nation governments.
That is the hope of CPC-4. It's aiming to ensure that the protection zones can be defined clearly and not get caught up in any, frankly, legal dispute, whether it be from provinces or first nations, about what the zones may look like.
I will end it there. We're hoping to include co-development, which I believe is in the spirit of this legislation.
:
I understand that what we've asked for is consultation and co-operation with provinces that's consistent with this legislation, but this seems to add a layer of bureaucracy of co-developing different agreements with all of the different provinces and territories.
I'm wondering if that's consistent with the legislation that we're looking at now or if it would require extra layers of bureaucracy in asking provinces to co-develop something and if we'd be waiting on provinces to move forward in this area for first nations water.
I'm a little concerned that by having these co-developments with provinces, as opposed to co-operation and consultation, it might take years for that to actually happen, and first nations communities would not have protection zones and first nations water legislation.
Am I understanding this amendment by the Conservatives correctly, and what the implications might be?
:
In previous remarks we spoke about consultation and co-operation being embedded in UNDA. This being absent, it certainly still holds here.
To your point, I don't think there's consensus, even among many first nations, on what the bar is for co-development. I certainly would say that it applies for provinces and territories.
What is being proposed would be co-developing with those three parties of provinces, territories and first nations. That concept of engagement among first nations has been a tricky one and one that you have heard many times from partners coming to this table on this legislation.
Now this is being applied to provinces and territories. I have not heard from provinces and territories what their opinion on co-development is, but I would imagine it is a very high bar and one for which I have not seen a precedent.
I appreciate the concern raised. I do. I believe, however, that bringing this forward will help protect the process and ensure that it's not caught up in court in legal battles and will actually get to a place where this legislation could hopefully be effective. That is the aim of this amendment, Mr. Chair.
As mentioned, co-development is perhaps a bit of a new term in this concept, but the has used it many times in the context of the development of this bill.
You suggest, Mr. Barbosa, that co-development could delay the implementation of this bill. Could I ask if the co-development process for this legislation delayed the implementation of Bill ?
:
The department has submitted a brief to this committee on the engagement process leading to the tabling of the bill on December 11 of last year, so I won't speak more about the engagement process, but I would refer members to that.
With regard to the latter question, this section is about the creation of, and consultation on, protection zones. As we've discussed many times, the first concept is what the space is—who the people are in that space, the parties in that space, the laws that protect that protection zone and what the consequences are. It requires all parties to come together and now co-develop an approach.
We've heard concerns from many first nations, as have members of this committee, about the willingness of provinces to come to the table to support aligned laws and to create a co-developed context in which provinces must be co-developers in that process. As I've mentioned before, that may detract potential provinces and territories, and maybe even first nations, from aligning the laws. Ultimately, this legislation is about empowering first nations to create their own laws and protecting Canada's waters. There may be limitations to that with this amendment.
:
I just want to support my colleague, Eric Melillo. I think what he says is very accurate. This is a pre-emptive bit of good advice, especially as part of the legislation, to keep it out of the courts.
Let's get back to the premise of the bill. This is very much setting itself up to be an impediment to getting water for first nations, as opposed to actually getting water for first nations. This government has been in power for nine years. Are all the boil water advisories gone? No, they're not. The government promised that they'd be gone as of 2021, but here we are.
The government could keep going down the list and just keep eliminating those boil water advisories, but instead of that, it's offering a piece of legislation that potentially will restrict water for first nations and get it caught up in courts across the country because certain provinces have problems with the way this legislation is written.
I would challenge the government just to get water done and, you know, follow up on a promise it made a long time ago instead of tangling up the entire process in the courts.
Thanks.
:
While I can definitely agree that if you had provincial governments and first nations and the federal government as willing participants at the table to co-develop something when the intent was to ensure that first nations had clean water and the protection zones under this were covered, in Nova Scotia they poisoned water next to Pictou Landing and in that area for more than 40 years. The province refused to come to the table to talk about it because of the industry that was making money and creating jobs.
Now, if we're asking first nations to come to the table with a province that is putting industry and jobs ahead of clean water for that first nation, what we're doing in this legislation is that instead of having protected zones with consultation and co-operation with provinces, we're giving the provinces the ability to say that they won't co-develop this with first nations.
It seems to me that if we're trying to protect the protection zones that first nations are connected to, we're giving the provinces an ability to say, “No, we didn't co-develop that, so it's not something we're going to move forward on.”
If the NDP supports this, I want them to know that we're giving provinces the ability to continue to poison first nations communities' waters and to not come to the table at all. We've seen too many examples, in the history of first nations, of provinces putting jobs and industry ahead of first nations communities. By putting that in there, what we're doing, in a sense, is giving provinces the ability to say that they didn't co-develop that or that they refuse to co-develop it because it might impact jobs in their communities.
For that reason, I cannot accept this amendment. I would strongly encourage my colleagues to have conversations with first nations communities on what is about to transpire.
We're not giving first nations any increased rights with this amendment; we're giving provinces the ability to walk away from first nations protected zones, such as what happened in Pictou Landing, where their connected water was poisoned for decades, if not generations.
To the officials, I'm wondering if my concerns are valid on this.
:
I think I've spoken a lot about my feelings on the bar being very high for provinces and territories.
Again, the entire provision is about creating a space for first nations and provinces and territories to come together to protect sources of water. We've talked about that a lot. There are already provisions in the legislation that talk about ensuring that first nations' voices are heard in that process through consultation and co-operation.
Creating co-development universally—first nations, provinces and territories—will certainly increase the bar for what that process will look like, including for first nations, but it may and could detract provinces and territories from coming into that space.
Ultimately, if one of the foundations of this legislation is to ensure that first nations can protect their waters, we may be undoing that with this amendment.
:
I can, yes. We may be undoing, if this legislation....
Again, let's go back to the principles of this legislation. One is self-determination by first nations in protecting their waters on their lands. The second one is closing a regulatory gap, and the third is to create a space to align laws for first nations and for provinces and territories to come together to protect waters together.
By creating such a high bar for provinces and territories and first nations to come together in a co-developed way, we may be detracting or taking away one of the core, fundamental elements of this bill because of the nature of the engagement process, the co-development process.
:
Thank you, Chair. Thanks for having me here as a guest at the committee.
It's a very interesting discussion. I'm reminded of a discussion I had with a NAN elder up in Sioux Lookout, where we were doing boil water advisory work together. He made the comment that “It's the paper mills and the mines, the poking holes in Mother Earth that causes the first problem.” This legislation intends to solve that by starting with the first principles of having clean water.
Having bars such that the indigenous people aren't able to negotiate clean water—such as putting the recommendation we're discussing right now on the table, saying that everybody has to be at the table, including the provinces—could not only impede the NAN from successfully gaining clean water, but could also cause the elder to lose people from his band to the employment in the paper mills and the mines, and so people aren't even able to work on clean water solutions.
I think that keeping the frustrations away from the first nations and making sure that we have a clear pathway for them to get to clean water is very important, so I won't be supporting this amendment for that reason.
I appreciate the discussion, the input and the difference of opinions.
I would look at a couple of examples. The dental plan is a negotiated one. Child care was negotiated with provinces individually; the federal government has been working through that process, and I think they've come to a lot of agreements with provinces individually, rather than with all as one.
Regarding the challenge that some people might feel that co-operation to develop agreements is problematic, I think that the co-operation is essential on this particular issue, as with policing. The federal government is now working with indigenous and provincial governments to establish different policing models across the country. Again, it is a co-operative attempt to deal with the policing issues, which are urgent, and indigenous and provincial representatives are coming to the table with the federal government to develop different policing models.
There are examples of that happening trilaterally across the country, and, as I say, the federal government has been attempting to do that one-on-one in specific programs with provinces across the country and is establishing agreements on different programs that they're setting up.
I'm a little more optimistic than maybe some people are. Especially on this particular topic, I think there is more consensus about coming to the table to work on an agreement. I'm of the belief that a co-operative agreement is a better agreement than a mandated one or one without a partnership. We've talked about partnerships a lot here on this particular issue, and I think partnerships make for a better agreement and a longer-lasting agreement and are a much better approach than excluding people from them.
I'm a little more optimistic than some people might be on this particular issue.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
I'm 100% in favour of co-development with first nations. The problem is it's the first nations' water, and they have the motivation to want to come to the table because it's their water. It's talking about their fishing rights and it's talking about their access to clean water. We heard from witnesses who were in tears and who talked about the poisoning of the very waters in which their children were swimming in Alberta.
If we're not just asking for co-development from first nations but also for co-development from a province that could walk away and say it's not coming to the table because of jobs, industry or political reasons, as a first nations person, I'll say that this defeats the purpose of what we're trying to accomplish here in protecting the water sources they're connected to.
If there's an amendment we could come to that says that first nations.... I'm happy to have a strong co-development aspect of it, if that's what it takes, but to give the province the ability to not come to the table and say it's not going to come to the table because it doesn't feel this is necessary would allow first nations' water sources to be poisoned like they've been poisoned for the past 100 years. The entire intent of this legislation is to ensure that the first nations who live on reserve and who have been abandoned many times by the provinces for corporate gain.... I would think that this would be at the heart of what this bill is trying to prevent.
I just need to be clear that first nations across Canada and the first nations I've talked to are agreeing is a standard we need to put above co-operation and consultation. I want the provinces to be involved and I want them to have a say, but I don't want them to have a veto over whether they can poison first nations communities' water or not.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I appreciate the opportunity to speak to CPC-5 and to move CPC-5.
I think it's an important amendment toward ensuring that first nation rights are protected, as well as understanding what a clear definition of protection zone would be and that the agreement of provinces and territories is absolutely critical to ensuring a smooth process in the development of that.
Pertaining to the protection zone, the amendment would read as follows:
(3) A regulation made under subsection (1) must not come into force unless the Minister has obtained free, prior and informed consent of First Nation governing bodies and the consent of the governments of the provinces and territories.
Mr. Chair, there's been a lot of discussion about this amendment during our various pauses throughout the day. I understand that there also may be a subamendment coming to address some of that language to make it more clear.
I encourage all colleagues around the table to support this amendment. I think it reinforces free, prior and informed consent in UNDRIP, which, of course, is already Canadian law, and will add extra affirmation for provinces and territories to ensure that in regard to any land that may be provincially governed, or any Crown land at this point in time, that could fall into a protection zone, those relevant provinces and territories are at the table to have agreement on what that definition will be.
I'll leave it there for now, Mr. Chair. I appreciate the opportunity to bring this forward.
:
I like the word "agreement" better than the word "consent", because “agreement” has some sort of practical application. It's saying there is an agreement among the groups involved.
For the purposes of this amendment, I'm really trying to get to wording that the government can support but that also doesn't infringe on provincial jurisdiction. When we're talking about protection zones that first nations are involved with, my concern is over a province not wanting to come to an agreement.
In the same vein as for the last amendment, I would be uncomfortable supporting an amendment whereby a province could continue to say that we don't have agreement. Thereby, there's a veto of protection zones, and communities could still have their waters poisoned.
This is my question to the officials here. If there is no agreement from the provinces, or a province, on what's considered a protection zone in that province, does that mean the whole purpose of protecting first nations' water would then not be in place?
I believe, because of the wording, it's saying that unless an agreement is finalized with a province, there will be no protections for first nations' water. My fear, just like in the last piece, is that if the protection of a first nation's water source is entirely dependent on an agreement of a province, it would mean that there is no protection until the province decides that there should be.
Is that an accurate assessment of this amendment?
:
I appreciate the question.
These particular clauses work with other provisions in the bill as well. Clause 21 is really about bringing all parties together to the table to define what a protection zone is—first nations, provinces and territories and multiple federal ministers who are implicated on water.
The second phase of that is really in paragraph 6(1)(b), and that talks about individual first nations or groups of first nations coming together with the provinces and territories where they are located to agree upon an approach to implement and coordinate the laws of all orders of government in that space.
It is a multi-pronged approach that is contemplated. This potential amendment would add an extra step in that approach.
:
I appreciate the question.
It is delicate. There is no intent to infringe on provincial jurisdiction and every intent to respect that provincial jurisdiction.
That existing language around “consult and cooperate” with all parties allows everybody to have an equal seat at the table, working together on what those protection zones look like. Then, for the actual implementation of those protection zones, it's up to a willing buyer and willing seller—so provinces and first nations—to sit together and come to an agreement or another agreed-upon approach. It could be an exchange of letters, for example, among chiefs, premiers and ministers on how they would coordinate laws to implement actions in those protection zones.
I'm just wondering about.... Even if the second “consent” word was changed to “agreement”, the impact of this amendment, if it were passed.... We're talking about differentiations right now, with “jurisdiction” in clause 6 and then “agreement” in clause 21.
While I appreciate your feedback about the importance of outlining it in the “Jurisdiction” section, when we're talking about clause 21 and “agreement”.... This is feedback similar to what I've shared about how important it is that first nations are finally given the legal platform to have their voices heard on these kinds of things. This is because, while I appreciate the first “consent”—that the minister has obtained the free, prior and informed consent—of first nations governing bodies, I'm a bit more concerned about the governments of the provinces and territories.
You mentioned earlier, for example, that the agreed-upon approach could be used by way of letters. Would that be a strong enough indication to show that the first nations governing bodies will have the interpretation that these agreements will use their voice and that their first nations laws or their first nations law-making powers will be able to be incorporated in the section on agreements?
I'm sorry. It's not on agreements. What is this section? Am I missing a page? No, I'm not.
I'm sorry. It's the protection zones.
:
I appreciate the questions. Maybe some additional clarification from my end would be helpful.
In essence, this section is really around regulation-making to define what a protection zone is and bringing all provinces and all first nations together as part of that process.
On clause 6, the “Jurisdiction” section, it is really up to individual first nations whether they want to exercise that jurisdiction or not. Part of the Government of Canada's intent here is to allow for traditional governance systems in how first nations exercise their jurisdiction. That is why paragraph 6(1)(b) is worded as an agreed-upon approach. It's to leave space for traditional governance and preferred governance systems of first nations, as long as they're agreeable to all implicated parties.
In that case, it's not necessarily all provinces. If the first nation is located in only one province and has a protection zone in only one province, it would be only that province.
I do appreciate the discussion on this and the concerns raised.
I think it's important, of course, to note that there are not many places throughout this bill where free, prior and informed consent is mentioned. This amendment aims to include that. I know that NDP‑40 was withdrawn in favour of this one to ensure that first nations' consent is included.
In terms of the agreement of the provinces and territories, I appreciate the concerns raised; however, I worry that without that agreement right from the get-go, a scenario may arise, as was described, in which perhaps there's a province that is not willing to agree or co-operate. In such a scenario, I think that without this amendment we're going to see this bill tied up in challenges.
We've talked about the fact that we don't know exactly what a protection zone will be. It may include land that is currently governed by the provinces. We've talked about what “connected” means in terms of rivers and how vast that could be. I think we run a real risk of tying this up in battles and challenges without provincial agreement.
Of course, we talked at length off-line about the word “agreement”, Mr. Chair. Although that is not defined explicitly, I think it gives the government some latitude on how they achieve that agreement, and we've seen many examples of the government being able to make agreements with the provinces and territories on a number of their programs and initiatives that they like to boast about. I won't advertise them for them, but they can if they'd like to.
I think that this is the balance we need to ensure so that first nation rights are respected, that the provinces and territories are respected and that we can put this into action and have a tangible effect, rather than just having it challenged over and over again.
I'll end there, Mr. Chair. Thank you.
:
Once again, I like the word “agreement” better than the word “consent”, but I do want some sort of protection for first nations communities that protects a water source that's connected to them, whether it's their drinking water or their fishing zones. There should be some kind of protection so that first nations have these things protected within this bill without it being dependent on an agreement with the province.
I'd like to believe that provinces would have a moral obligation to ensure that the water sources of first nations communities are protected, but they may not have any other incentive beside that, especially with competing things like industry, corporate greed and costs that provinces might have to associate with it. I'd hate to have to hold up the entire purpose of this legislation because a province refused to sign on to an agreement that is the essence of this legislation, which is to protect these water sources for first nations communities.
If there was a time frame or if something was inherently built in that provinces would have to do in a timely manner and in good faith to uphold the honour of the Crown, I could possibly support that, but as it's written, it gives the province the ability to say that they don't want to come to an agreement with first nations communities over protected zones that they may be drinking from or fishing from or that they may be reliant on for passage of barges, as Mr. McLeod described about the Mackenzie River.
I would hate to say that when we had the ability to define protected zones in a good way, we left all the power in the hands of the province that has held it for the last few decades, if not generations, and that we failed to reach a consensus on how we can ensure that first nations have those protection zones completed and at the same time give the province the ability to weigh in.
I think that “consult and co-operate” might still be the best wording on that, but I know that this is a contentious part of this bill, and I'd hate to move forward in a way that doesn't have the Bloc or the Conservatives on board with protecting provincial interests. I know that's important for them.
I think that the discussion needs to be on what the correct wording is that allows us all to leave here comfortable that not only are the first nations protected—I am from a first nations community—but also that the provinces have a reasonable say in upholding the honour of the Crown.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, as no one else was intervening.
I again appreciate the concerns raised. I reiterate my belief that without provincial and territorial agreement, this bill will become almost unenforceable.
I'd say as well that I take the concerns raised by Mr. Battiste, but I don't believe there are just financial or industry incentives for provinces to want to maintain authority over certain lands or waterways. I mean, many provinces have very robust wildlife management strategies in a number of areas like that, areas that are already being protected in their own right.
I do have a very great concern with the federal government being able to define a protection zone without.... Again, we're not getting to the definition of it here in this legislation, nor should we be. We need to ensure we're hearing the voices of first nations and provinces and territories. We have to set this up in a way to be successful and to be collaborative. I do believe that this is the way forward, and I'd encourage my colleagues to vote in favour.
:
I was reminded of a story about the Quebec hydro dam and the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement. I think that was the first modern land claims agreement Canada had with a first nation or an indigenous rights-holding group. That first one was truly co-developed, I understand. There were true negotiations whereby the indigenous, Cree and Inuit peoples in that area were able to negotiate an agreement that continues to have impacts on their communities.
Since that agreement, with a lot of the subsequent land claims agreements that happened afterward with other indigenous groups, the federal government learned with each negotiation to water them down. For example, to get the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement, we had to extinguish some of our rights.
I'm wondering about learning from those kinds of lessons. If this amendment were to go through—without talking about delay, but talking about the dialogue and the content of that dialogue—what kind of impact would it have on first nations governing bodies that have not been able to rightfully exercise their rights as first nations governing bodies because they aren't being given the equal platform to be first nations governing bodies?
:
I know protection zones are going to be contentious, and I don't see us getting to a consensus on them in this committee.
I'm wondering if we can agree to the subamendment for “agreement“, as opposed to “consent” in the provincial part. Have some conversations and park all of the amendments on protection zones to give us some time to reach out to parties and find out what they're comfortable with and how we can ensure that the onus isn't....
Well, the veto rights over protection zones do not rest with the provinces, but it gives them an ample opportunity to collaborate with first nations on their views and to be able to move past protection zones and come back to them at a later point.
At this time, I don't think we have agreement on protection zones. That may jeopardize our passing this when it comes to an actual vote, whether by unanimous consent or.... I've had some conversations with Mr. Melillo, and we're not close to the same spot where we need to be on this.
I'm wondering if the Bloc and the NDP would be agreeable to parking the discussion on protection zones. It would give us, the government, an opportunity to reach consensus on how we can best balance first nations communities' need to protect their protection zones with provincial governments wanting to ensure that their jurisdiction is respected.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Battiste.
I'm just going to comment on this before opening it up to others to make comments.
We could vote on the subamendment now and then stand this clause, such that we would come back to it at the very end. We did the same thing for the definitions. We would go through the rest of the clauses, then the definitions and then end with this, which would give time for that type of conversation to happen.
With that, I'll open it up for others to make an intervention on that, starting with Mr. Melillo.
I do appreciate the way in which Mr. Battiste is trying to collaborate and get to a point where everyone can be happy with this bill. Obviously, this is a very important aspect of the legislation, so I have no issue with taking a bit more time to discuss it.
I would suggest as well, though, that we do dispose of the subamendment at the very least, if there is agreement to include “agreement” rather than “consent” for provinces. I think that's a relatively simple change that we can dispose of.
:
Thank you, Mr. Melillo.
Are there any other thoughts?
Are we ready to vote on the subamendment, then? It looks like there is unanimous consent for CPC-5 to be subamended.
(Subamendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Next, do we have unanimous consent to stand clause 21, so that we return to it at the end?
(Clause 21 allowed to stand)
(On clause 22)
The Chair: The first amendment in clause 22 is BQ-15.