The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Transport Canada launching First Nations vessel monitoring program

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Transport Minister Marc Garneau says efforts to protect Canada’s coastlines from vessel spills includes an “unpreceden­ted level of collaborat­ion” with Indigenous communitie­s.

Garneau announced a pilot project under the $1.5-billion ocean protection plan to help Indigenous communitie­s monitor vessel traffic while speaking to the Chamber of Shipping in Vancouver on Tuesday.

The project is being launched this fall in 10 communitie­s including Haida and Gitga’at Nations on British Columbia’s north coast to test and develop new maritime awareness informatio­n systems in order to have a better understand­ing of the traffic around them.

“The second step, of course, is that the First Nations will be involved in the response because very often they’re the first ones there anyway and they have an intimate knowledge of the local waters,” he said.

Exact plans on how to improve emergency response, protect ecosystems and managing vessel traffic are being developed between government agencies and First Nations, he said.

“We value and need their knowledge and expertise to be successful,” Gauneau said.

Responding to questions about how the new Indigenous rights framework announced by the government in February should be approached by sectors working with both parties, Garneau told the shipping industry to be “open-minded.”

“It’s not just a question of respect, it’s a question of actually acting,” he said. “Some organizati­ons will be involved more than others ... but it really, literally, is a new way of thinking about how we achieve reconcilia­tion in this country.”

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