I think it is.
Commissioner Awashish will comment, but just quickly, I would mention that when we have representations--or complaints, under the act--brought to us by individuals and communities and so on, we whip out a copy of the Cree-Naskapi (of Quebec) Act and say, “Well, it says this and this and this.” One of the comments we get, and we've had it a number of times, is, “That's not the way we do things around here.” And the same is true for bylaws made under the act.
The first reaction of someone from southern Canada.... Let's say I held an act out in front of one of my MPPs, or my MLAs, or one of you guys, and I said, “How come this is not happening?” If you replied, “That's not how we do things”, I'd be pretty mad. I'd say, “But that's how you should be doing them. It's the law.”
But we're in a different context here. We're in a situation where the Cree and the Naskapi have had traditional and customary law for thousands of years. The Cree-Naskapi (of Quebec) Act and the bylaws made under it are supposed to be a way to give legal effect, in the Canadian legal system, to making community decisions that are approved by the community and are within the powers of the community.
If you look at the election sections of the act, most communities have made an election bylaw. When we began to look at them--because a lot of disputes are about elections--we saw that one day, along came the Cree-Naskapi (of Quebec) Act, and it was, “Oh, we have to have an election bylaw.”
It was fairly obvious that some lawyer from southern Canada--with all due respect--opened up the briefcase, said, “Aha! An election bylaw”, changed a few names and a few things in a few places, and there it was, there was the template.
There's nothing wrong with that. It had to be done. But the reality is that things operate a little differently in the community. It's not that there's any moral violation of the law, it's just that the technicalities are more consistent with traditional and customary law, such as postponing an election for a day if an elder dies. That's not permitted in the act. That's an example anybody can follow, but there are a lot of other similar things.
One of the things we've been pushing at for years is the need to make the law accommodate and empower the Cree way of doing things, while still being consistent with the charter and so on, to make it a tool for the communities to use, so that when the community decides to do something, then it's a legitimate decision. There's legislative capacity to give that effect and to protect it from attack from people who want to argue that the election was a day late and therefore invalid.
I think the problem very frequently is that the act doesn't sufficiently empower the communities. With all due respect, it's a great improvement over the Indian Act, but it suffers from some of the same straitjacket effect that the Indian Act has always imposed.
That's inevitable. It was written, yes, with negotiation, but it was ultimately written by people who have written for years such things as the Indian Act. There's a need to break out of that box, to make sure that traditional and customary law, to the extent possible....
We all recognize the charter, the Criminal Code, and the other instruments that we all respect and share. But within those contexts, there's a need to make this act a tool of empowerment for the Cree community so that they can get on with doing things.
I'm sorry I took a little long, Mr. Chair.