Thank you. Yes, I think the most interesting and perhaps innovative water governance that's going on right now is taking place where local communities have partnered with the provincial government, and in some cases the federal government, to do things in a very different way. I'll give you three examples.
Maybe I'll start with the most controversial and the hardest one to deal with. You're all familiar with the Mikisew Cree First Nation and the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation in northern Alberta, and their long-standing relationship with the Peace-Athabasca delta and the Wood Buffalo National Park. They are in the place where they rely extensively on water flows for accessing their traditional territories to hunt and do other traditional activities. They are impacted by the flows coming in from British Columbia and the Peace because of the variety of dams that are there, and also the pollution that is coming up from the tar sands in Alberta, so they have entered into various agreements with the federal government to address both flows and contamination, primarily pushed by an international body, UNESCO, at the United Nations level, so there's a lot. There's been an action plan and there's been a lot of movement in that in a way that hasn't been seen before on such a very large scale.
Two other examples, as Andrew mentioned, are the Koksilah and the Cowichan. The Cowichan tribes entered into an agreement with the Province of B.C., and the federal government has been involved integrally from a fisheries perspective, but they've entered into an agreement to do a joint water sustainability plan. The idea is to address flow issues in a comprehensive planning way so that farmers don't get shut off every year.
That's the problem: In August and September there's a pretty integral flow problem. To make sure that all the fish don't die, the farmers have to go to a watering regime that's not ideal for them, as primarily they're dairy farmers, so they've entered into an agreement to deal with the upland aspects of flows—the forestry and other things that are going on in the watershed.
The idea is that this is a 500-year plan. It really gets beyond the short-term approaches to collaborative management and it's saying that we're in this relationship for a very long time and we have to start to fix it properly.
The final example is the Gitanyow Hereditary Chiefs, who have just recently declared their water policy based on their indigenous legal order and have actually established their own flow and quality parameters for using water within their territory. They have a long-standing relationship with the province around land use planning and they've now just brought it over to water flows.