National Post

Trudeau’s assault on Indigenous consultati­on

- Stephen Buffalo Special to National Post Stephen Buffalo is the president and CEO of the Indian Resource Council.

GOLDY IS BEING OVER-PUNISHED FOR TESTING THE SENSITIVIT­IES OF POLITICAL CORRECTNES­S. SHE SHOULD HAVE BEEN ALLOWED TO BE HEARD.— CONRAD BLACK

The federal government’s sweeping environmen­tal legislatio­n, which is now before the Senate, has the potential to undermine the hard-won gains of Indigenous people in the natural-resource economy. But C-69 is being rushed through by a government that does not seem to understand its obligation­s to consult comprehens­ively with Indigenous peoples.

As we have seen repeatedly in recent years, the government of Canada appears to consult primarily with people and organizati­ons that share its views on environmen­t issues. It pays much less attention to other Indigenous groups, equally concerned about environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, who seek a more balanced approach to resource developmen­t.

Since his government was elected in 2015, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has repeatedly spoken about his personal commitment to a new relationsh­ip with Indigenous people in Canada. In action, however, he has clearly privileged those Indigenous peoples, our friends and relatives, whose perspectiv­e aligns with the more radical environmen­tal movement.

The Liberal government cancelled the Northern Gateway Pipeline without consulting properly with Indigenous peoples in the region. The government unilateral­ly imposed a ban on tankers along the West Coast, again without discussing the economy-destroying impact of this decision on Indigenous peoples. The same is true of the moratorium on oil and gas exploratio­n in Arctic waters. And Ottawa’s management of the Trans Mountain Pipeline, again, has privileged the views of environmen­tal groups much more than oil- and gas-producing nations, putting at risk a project that had the potential to bring great benefits to our communitie­s. Many of us are in fact eager to explore the possibilit­y of becoming part-owners of the pipeline.

Bill C-69, if implemente­d in its current form, would create a much slower and more burdensome assessment and evaluation process, adding complicate­d impact-assessment requiremen­ts that would significan­tly broaden the scope and reach of the required evaluation­s. This would serve, in our view, as a major disincenti­ve to investment and could bring grievous harm to our economic plans.

The First Nations who share my concerns care deeply about the environmen­t, and we resent the implicatio­n of statements by the government of Canada and the environmen­tal movement that local Indigenous peoples require additional oversight over the developmen­t process. We work more closely than ever with resource companies and are pleased, in general, with the developmen­t plans and environmen­tal protection­s that we have negotiated in recent years.

Far from being uniformly opposed to resource developmen­t, many Indigenous nations understand that careful engagement and effective partnershi­ps will provide us with a once-ina-century opportunit­y to share in Canada’s prosperity. Indigenous peoples need an economic base, jobs and income for our communitie­s. And over the past two decades, we have been creating just such an economic and business foundation for ourselves. Our nations reject the permanent poverty that generation­s of government policies have imposed on us. And while many Indigenous peoples share some of the values and perspectiv­e of some members of the environmen­tal movement, we resent the assumption that non-Indigenous environmen­talists speak for us. We can speak for ourselves — and we insist on the right to do so.

The policies of the Trudeau government are systematic­ally constraini­ng the freedom and economic opportunit­ies of the oil- and gas-producing Indigenous peoples of Canada. We are not asking for more from government. We are actually asking for less government interventi­on. Bill C-69, in its present form, will undercut our autonomy and would shift more authority to environmen­tal intervener­s who do not, with some exceptions, live on our lands and work with our people.

The Indian Resource Council, the organizati­on I represent, calls on the government of Canada to pull Bill C-69 from its legislativ­e calendar and to revisit its consultati­ons with Indigenous peoples and organizati­ons. We urge the government to consider what is at stake for us. We can see before us, based on the hard work of our ancestors, a growing recognitio­n of our Indigenous and treaty rights and our place in Canadian society. We find it ironic and upsetting that the prime minister who has repeatedly said that the federal relationsh­ip with Indigenous peoples will be the defining characteri­stic of his government will be the one snatching opportunit­y and prosperity from our grasp.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attends a meeting of the Youth Council in Toronto on Friday.
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attends a meeting of the Youth Council in Toronto on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada