Medicine Hat News

Conservati­ve MP walks back comments on First Nations water plants amid criticism

- ALESSIA PASSAFIUME

After drawing criticism earlier this week for saying that some First Nations are burning down water treatment plants because of the federal Liberal government, a Conservati­ve MP is now walking back his comments.

Saskatchew­an MP Kevin Waugh made the assertion in the House of Commons on Monday during a debate on the government’s First Nations water bill.

“In my home province of Saskatchew­an, I have seen reserves burn down water treatment plants because the Liberal government has done little or nothing,” Waugh said, directing his comments towards Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu.

He added there needs to be “education provided for people on reserve to operate these water treatment plants,” and blamed the Liberals for not doing more.

Waugh’s office confirmed Wednesday he was referring to fires in Saskatchew­an First Nations in recent years.

A water plant in Carry the Kettle Nakoda Nation was damaged by a fire in 2019, and another in Piapot First Nation burned down in 2018.

But no specific cause was reported for either fire, and the MP’s office conceded he is not familiar with any specific circumstan­ces, saying he did not intend to make any implicatio­n about why the fires happened.

“MP Waugh was pointing out that after eight years of Justin Trudeau and this Liberal government, what we have is a trail of broken promises and countless Indigenous communitie­s that don’t have access to clean drinking water,” his office said.

Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu said there’s no place in the House of Commons for the kind of rhetoric she heard from

Waugh on Monday - especially during debate on a bill that seeks to restore First Nations’ inherent rights.

“The first question coming from the Conservati­ve side of the benches really illustrate­d the kinds of harmful stereotype­s that First Nations have been living with for a very long time,” Hajdu told reporters outside the House of Commons earlier this week.

She added that his remarks implied First Nations are destroying their own infrastruc­ture and that they don’t have the skills, dignity or capacity to run their own water treatment plants.

Hajdu said she would consult with interim Liberal

House leader Steven MacKinnon on whether they would ask Waugh to withdraw his comments.

The Southern Chiefs Organizati­on, which represents 34 First Nations in southern Manitoba, said Waugh’s remarks reinforced harmful stereotype­s about First Nations in an era of reconcilia­tion.

“I urge all members of Parliament to remember the devastatio­n First Nation people and communitie­s have experience­d at the hands of government­s and systems in what is now Canada,” said Grand Chief Jerry Daniels.

“Elected officials must remember the importance of building relationsh­ips with First Nations based on kindness and mutual respect to benefit everyone.”

Waugh’s office said his party will continue to work with Indigenous Peoples to ensure First Nations communitie­s have access to clean drinking water.

The much-anticipate­d legislatio­n MPs are debating seeks to improve water quality in First Nations communitie­s, improve collaborat­ion on water protection and codify a new First Nations-led water commission.

It was tabled in December more than a year after the federal government repealed legislatio­n on drinking water for First Nations that dated back to Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government.

Harper’s government said at the time that the 2013 Safe Drinking Water for First

Nations Act aimed to support the developmen­t of federal regulation­s that would improve First Nations’ access to clean drinking water and the effective treatment of wastewater.

But many First Nations said the legislatio­n was ineffectiv­e and dangerous, citing concerns about a lack of sustainabl­e funding and the infringeme­nt of constituti­onal rights.

Hajdu touted the new bill as the result of immense collaborat­ion and knowledges­haring, though some First Nations pushed back on that assertion when the legislatio­n was introduced.

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Kevin Waugh

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