The Hamilton Spectator

Time to get serious about water quality in First Nation communitie­s

It should be quite simple, but increasing funding will make the problems worse

- JOSEPH QUESNEL Joseph Quesnel is a research associate with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Pondering the crisis so many First Nations communitie­s face over water quality, you can’t help but think of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge: “Water, water, everywhere, Nor any drop to drink.”

The ironic dilemma of the mariner is obvious in more than 90 per cent of Canada’s First Nations communitie­s. Most are close to large bodies of water yet few can deliver clean water to their citizens.

The federal government and band councils need to get serious about water quality in First Nation communitie­s. Clean drinking water should be a fundamenta­l right for all Canadians.

The federal government got into hot water in early February for lack of progress on improving First Nation water systems.

The Liberals made a big deal about ending boil-water advisories on First Nations during the 2015 election campaign, yet nothing has been done more than two years later.

Indigenous Services Canada previously committed to ending longstandi­ng boil-water advisories in First Nation communitie­s by March 2021 at the latest.

However, although 40 advisories have been eliminated since November 2015, 26 new advisories have surfaced. Now, 91 boil-water advisories are in place.

Between 2006 and 2014, the former Conservati­ve government invested about $3 billion to help First Nations improve and manage their water and wastewater systems.

A report by then-Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Developmen­t Canada (AANDC) found that many First Nation water systems had substantia­l improvemen­ts in their risk levels over this period.

One of the biggest unsung successes of the Conservati­ve government was the passage of the Safe Drinking Water for First Nations Act in 2013.

This act filled the legislativ­e gap in

water quality regulation­s on First Nations.

In the fall of 2014, the government initiated a period of regulatory developmen­t under the act. According to Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada, the government was working on developing regulation­s jointly with Health Canada and First Nation partners, region by region.

But when the new government was elected in 2015, Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett was instructed to pause regulatory developmen­t. The government put the whole act under legislativ­e review, meaning the regulation­s are still not implemente­d.

According to a spokespers­on, the federal government is still talking with the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) and other Indigenous organizati­ons to come up with a “possible amendment or repeal of the current legislatio­n and the developmen­t of a new legislativ­e framework.”

While these talks take place, people are boiling their water before even bathing their children.

Why is the government working with AFN and other First Nation lobby groups behind closed doors?

Sadly, it’s because the Liberals apparently support band chiefs and their lobby groups more than grassroots First Nations citizens.

The Safe Drinking Water for First

Nations Act lists all the regulation­s possible on the recommenda­tions of the minister. The first regulation says they are responsibl­e for “the training and certificat­ion of operators of drinking water systems and wastewater systems.”

Of course, the proper training of operators, especially those who manage the wastewater systems, is critical to improving the drinking water problems in First Nations. So it’s crucial that government not gut legislatio­n that allows for regulation­s for those fundamenta­l operators.

The solution is not to dump more funds into systems without proper regulation­s.

John Graham, when with the Institute on Governance, argued that the answer is not for First Nations to be “isolated dots” across Canada. First Nations need to work with neighbouri­ng non-Indigenous communitie­s on providing water services or, at least, use the provincial certificat­ion programs that are available.

Solving this seemingly intractabl­e problem should be quite simple. Gutting current legislatio­n designed to help fix the problems and simply increasing funding will only make the problems worse.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Indigenous children play in the water filled ditches in the northern Ontario First Nations reserve in Attawapisk­at in 2016.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Indigenous children play in the water filled ditches in the northern Ontario First Nations reserve in Attawapisk­at in 2016.

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