(An edited version of this story appears in this week's NOW Magazine)
The Trudeau government has said it will consult with First Nations, but will it respect the duty to receive "free, prior, and informed consent" from indigenous communities?
Mohawk Chief Clinton Phillips in front of the St. Lawrence Seaway (credit: Mohawk Council of Kahnawake)
By Matthew Behrens
As the city of Montreal prepared to open the floodgates
on 8-billion litres of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River, Kahnawake Mohawk
Chief Clinton Phillips received a phone call from the person who ultimately approved
the massive dump.
It was
newly minted Environment Minister Catherine McKenna, about to board a plane for
the Paris climate conference pre-talk sessions. She spent 30 minutes discussing
a scientific report that recommended a controlled sewage release as the least
damaging of numerous lose-lose options.
“She has invited me to
participate in what is dubbed a post-mortem committee — their language, not
mine – to ensure this doesn't happen again,” Phillips says, noting he appreciated
that McKenna’s rock-and-a-hard-place decision was the predetermined product of
years of municipal, provincial, and federal failure to fix what was identified
two decades ago as a serious infrastructure challenge, one facing many other urban
centres (including Toronto).
Phillips, who has served in
office for over six years, was nonetheless taken aback to hear her voice. “I
don't recall ever hearing at our table that a [federal] minister had called any
one of us,” he says. “Even the former Minister of Indian Affairs never called
us.”
Nation to Nation Relationship
Although not widely publicized,
McKenna’s call could be a small but important symbol of how the Trudeau
government will live up to one of its biggest commitments as it strains to be all
things to all people. That challenge – the duty to meaningfully consult with
Indigenous peoples – was outlined last week in the ministerial mandate letter received
by Toronto MP Carolyn Bennett, the new Minister of Indigenous and Northern
Affairs.
“No relationship is
more important to me and to Canada than the one with Indigenous peoples,” wrote
Trudeau. “It is time for a renewed, nation-to-nation relationship with
Indigenous peoples, based on recognition of rights, respect, co-operation and
partnership.”
If Bennett requires a template of
how not to begin such a relationship, she need look no further than the
mishandling of the St. Lawrence sewage crisis.
Zero Consultation
Indeed, the Mohawk community of
Kahnawake lies just across the river from Montreal. “From my reserve to
downtown Montreal, without traffic, will take me seven minutes to drive,” Phillips
says, yet civic officials aware of such proximity did not think to involve his
people in any discussions about the impending flush of sewage into a waterway
that “is like blood that flows through our veins. Quebec is fully aware that
there is a duty to consult First Nations. To learn about this at the 11th
hour,” he says, and through the media no less, was insulting. “Temporary
measures were put in place in 1997. So, we're in 2015. How bloody long do they
think temporary means? So much time had gone by that different viable options
that would have been achievable were not being discussed.”
While members of the community protested, from
launching a flotilla to blocking the Mercier Bridge, Kahnawake leaders who hadn’t
been consulted all those years were finally able to attend two Montreal
meetings held mere days before the dump. “As a First Nations leader, it’s
unacceptable that the government is saying a couple of two-hour meetings
constitutes meaningful consultation,” says a frustrated Phillips. “Meantime, I
was being inundated with calls and emails from citizens of Montreal begging
with me, pleading, ‘don't let this happen, block a bridge, do this, do that.’
But I’m thinking, ‘it’s your government, why don't you do something? You don't
need us to always put our people on the line and then be hit by C-51 charges.’”
For members of the Kahnawake
community, the dump, which began November 11, was just the latest in a lengthy
series of blows the Mohawk people have been subjected to for centuries. “My
people have still not recovered since the Seaway system was put right through
the heart of our reserve, denying us access from what we call our river,”
Phillips says. “This hurts like you
wouldn't believe. Kahnawake means by the rapids, and we're not by the rapids
anymore because there’s a sewer system that goes right through the heart of our
reserve called the St. Lawrence Seaway.”
Threats to Indigenous People and Lands
In addition to dealing with the
post-dump environmental impacts, the community is also facing challenges in the
form of Enbridge and TransCanada pipeline projects. In this respect, the Mohawks
are not unlike many indigenous communities across the country dealing with
threats to their lands and water posed by lax pollution standards that may be exacerbated
with passage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, mining, deforestation, fracking,
and ongoing tarsands development.
It is here that Carolyn Bennett will face her biggest challenge, for while her mandate includes ensuring enhanced “consultation, engagement and participatory capacity of Indigenous groups in reviewing and monitoring major resource development projects,” how much power will that ultimately leave First Nations, Inuit and Metis communities whose livelihood and beliefs may prove incompatible with the bottom lines of multinational corporations? Notably, Bennett’s mandate carefully avoids one of the most critical phrases in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the “free, prior and informed consent” that is required of state parties “before adopting and implementing legislative or administrative measures that may affect them.” While Trudeau seeks to implement the Declaration, the Harper government refused to support it, fearing this phrase could be used to justify the veto of major energy projects.
McKenna’s phone call may be viewed as a small but hopeful first step in the right direction. But will a government that is friendly to the resource extraction and oil industries go beyond symbolic lip service to fully respect a consultative process that mandates “free, prior and informed consent”?
“First Nations across this country
and the US have been promised every single thing under the sun, and
unfortunately, it has never happened,” Phillips sighs. “You look at any
infrastructure in this country, it always goes right through the heart of
indigenous territory. Is that just another way to annoy us or assimilate us or
just get rid of us — genocide? It certainly doesn't make life easier for us.
“Whether it be Mulcair, Harper or Trudeau in power,
at the end of the day it's still the Government of Canada and they still follow
the Indian Act. For us, it's the same monster, just different people, and based
on history, all I can do is pray that things change for our people.”