Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Minister, for meeting with us here today and hearing our point of view and our questions on this bill.
One of the things you've said here gives me a lot of trouble. You've said that these territories are the same and you want to have the same legislation for them, that you want to have a cookie-cutter approach to northern development. It's really not appropriate. I think you should revise your thinking on that. These territories are very different. If you went to New Brunswick and said that you wanted to see the same environmental legislation in New Brunswick as in Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, I think you'd have a fight on your hands.
That's what you've created here. You thought that somehow the work you did in the Northwest Territories, much of which was opposed by the people there, is a good reason for why you're now going to come down on the Yukon and take a system that's working and denigrate it by these four amendments, denigrate the system that has been in place, that people agreed to, and that people are working under. Now you're going to put in amendments that were not well accepted in the Northwest Territories. The unilateral binding policy direction that you imposed on the Northwest Territories, the Mackenzie Valley Resource Management Act, was not universally accepted there, not by any means.
When you talk about doing this now in the Yukon to match up to the Northwest Territories, I think you're really just.... That is just a specious argument and you should refrain from it. You should recognize the character of these three territories.
Secondly, on the process you talked about for consultation, what you said to us today negates any consultation. When you say that you went to the first nations with a bill and couldn't give them the bill because it was in a form that was already, under federal rules, not allowed for distribution, you've negated the concept of consultation right there. You've already made up your mind. You've created a bill, so how can you go back and consult with people when you've already created a piece of legislation that you're going to put forward? That's another real problem I see with what you've said here today.
Then you bring out this definition of government that's in your agreement that you have here, and you say that because you define government this way, you can say that the first nations are not governments in the Yukon. No, there is a higher authority here and it's called the Constitution. You have to recognize that as well. We have given first nations rights under the Constitution and they must be respected.
On these three points, I think you've negated much of what you came here to try to accomplish in front of us. I think you should go back and take another look at this legislation. It's not supported by the Yukon people because they're happy with what they have. It's working. They're making their way through a very unique arrangement between first nations and public government that is very important to them.
Even the industry recognizes that. I refer you to a letter from Casino Mining. I refer you to a letter to you from the Tourism Industry Association of the Yukon. These are people who are saying, “Look, stop trying to turn back the clock, stop trying to reassert your paternalistic attitude towards the Yukon, and recognize that we've grown past that.” That's what they're saying to you.
Why are you doing what you're doing? What's the purpose of this, just to create more trouble, to bring us back to the courts like you've done in the Northwest Territories now with the super-board? We have an injunction. Hopefully that injunction will last past the next election and the new government can throw out your legislation. They can throw out that idea of a super-board and bring back what works in the Northwest Territories.
Those are issues that we see, that I see. You've said a lot here today, and I'm just showing you what you've done with what you've said here today.