Good afternoon. My name is Mathieu Madison. I'm president of the board of directors for the Regroupement des organismes de bassins versants du Québec. Our group includes 40 not‑for‑profit organizations from across Quebec that practice regional water governance.
I want to talk today about governance. I'll focus on two areas, which are Quebec's experience with regional governance and our recommendations for the Canada water agency, including considerations for its future structure and activities.
I want to share three key points with you. These points are drawn from our 20 years of experience in providing integrated water resource management at the watershed level in Quebec, with the help of 40 watershed organizations. Our main findings are as follows.
First, we found that water management in general is complex. It's complicated to talk about water quality, flooding and ecosystems. It's even more complicated to consider all the challenges, interests and concerns that sometimes differ from one water stakeholder to the next. It would be a mistake to try to simplify these complexities. Instead, we recommend working in an inclusive way, involving everyone in the discussion and holding extensive conversations with all water stakeholders. The goal is to identify the additional steps required to ensure collaboration and build consensus.
Our second finding concerns division. Water is managed in silos, both at different levels and scales, and also with local stakeholders. We recommend breaking out of these silos and implementing truly integrated management. We need to break down silos and find innovative and creative ways to get people to work together. In other words, we must break with the past to try to improve our current practices.
Our third finding concerns the choice of targets. Stakeholders often have a hard time understanding or implementing environmental targets for water quality or for a specific percentage of ecosystem conservation, for example. Farming is a good example. A farmer is unlikely to feel concerned by targets for water quality or invertebrate mackerel in a river. Since we want to be inclusive, we must find targets that more closely reflect the realities of the people we work with. We would like to redefine the notion of success. We'll no longer necessarily refer to environmental objectives, but rather to resilience, adaptation, creativity and innovation.
To some extent, this has been the experience of our watershed organizations for the past 20 years. Our mandate is to design a blueprint for water management. The blueprint should include the objectives and measures required for each area of our watersheds and a way to then engage and involve local stakeholders in implementing this action plan. Our findings show as much.
I also want to talk about what sectors the Canada water agency should focus on. The opportunity is ripe here to set up an agency that can provide real governance and try to address the proposed recommendations. The Canada water agency must bolster the legislative and executive authority of the Government of Canada in its jurisdictions.
The agency should also provide a platform for different national water stakeholders to discuss policy approaches and strategies; regulatory frameworks; and the prioritization of water research or specific projects. It could be a place to discuss the environmental assessment from a water perspective and to set funding priorities for water management. The agency would provide a genuine platform for the stakeholders and the departments involved to share ideas.
We also believe that the agency must take into account both provincial and federal jurisdictions. The Canada water agency must focus on certain exclusive jurisdictions or shared jurisdictions, such as transportation. We talked about navigation and invasive alien species. The federal government must be involved in these areas.
We must also consider transboundary watersheds. For example, in Quebec, we can't work on the Ottawa River without taking into account that a different province on the other side of the river handles water differently. To top it off, think of transboundary watersheds with the United States, such as the Saint John River, Lake Winnipeg, the Columbia River or the Great Lakes as a whole. Much work must be done on transboundary watersheds.
Of course, the federal government must address the issue of reconciliation with the first nations and their vital shared role in water management, particularly in a number of Canadian provinces. Thank you.