Good morning, everyone. Thanks for having me. It's a beautiful morning here in northeastern Alberta.
First of all, I'd like to thank the honourable members for allowing me to speak today.
My name is Billy-Joe Tuccaro. I'm the chief of Mikisew Cree First Nation. Mikisew's territory is located in what you know as northeastern Alberta. Our land includes the Peace-Athabasca delta and Wood Buffalo National Park, a UNESCO world heritage site. This is where our people have lived since time immemorial, where the Peace and Athabasca rivers meet and eventually enter Lake Athabasca.
Many of you know Mikisew because we are downstream from the Athabasca oil sands or because we have been raising alarm bells about our community's cancer rates, which we believe are coming from the fish we eat, the water we drink and the medicines we harvest. I have spoken at a committee in the past for Imperial Kearl and the freshwater study. I explained how, for our people, water is boss. I explained how our women have jurisdiction over water, and because they were excluded from treaty-making, we never treatied our water. The water in Treaty 8 is, in your words, “unsurrendered”.
Today, I should be speaking to you about our existing jurisdiction and honouring the treaty. Instead, I'm here to talk to you about your legislation, Bill C-61, and what it will impose on us.
In a nutshell, Bill C-61 may sound better than the Indian Act, but it does the same thing. We are asking for an end to this colonization through legislation. Please reject Bill C-61.
To support this request, I will raise four issues.
First and foremost, I am here to remind you about our treaty. The treaty is why we are all here today. Our ancestors agreed to share the land with the Crown. No legislation can supersede this promise.
Second, I would like to talk about what Bill C-61 calls “source water”. It is absurd to think that a federal regulation can displace the province's full control over our water, for example in the granting of water licences to withdraw and release industrial waste water. Why is the province in the driver's seat? Nowhere in Canada's Constitution does it say the province has all jurisdiction over water. I am told that Alberta's jurisdiction has evolved from powers over property rights and local works. Meanwhile, the Constitution says that the federal government has jurisdiction over fisheries and navigable waters, yet Canada has failed us by surrendering regulatory control over source water to Alberta.
By looking at the oil sands, I can explain this problem. The tailings ponds are the largest industrial waste site in the world. We have learned from operators' reports submitted to the Alberta Energy Regulator that tailings toxins are seeping into the muskeg, groundwater and rivers, including the Athabasca River, where our drinking water comes from. Canada and Alberta know about this. The tailings contain at least 1.4 trillion litres of toxic fluid. Alberta and Canada intend to treat and release much of these tailings into the Athabasca River, which is totally uncalled for.
Bill C-61 won't do a single thing to stop the treatment and release of toxins into our so-called source water, so again, let's go back to treaty, the natural resources transfer acts and the Constitution. None of that gave Canada or Alberta jurisdiction to do what they are doing with our water.
Third, where is the human right to water? The UN special rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water called on Canada in April to constitutionally recognize this internationally protected right. Let's do that instead of Bill C-61.
I might also add, where I live in Fort Chipewyan, it's now $30 for a flat of water. I was just recently down south and I purchased a flat of water for $4.99.
Fourth, what about our laws? Bill C-61 claims to recognize our self-government. This bill does no such thing. If we decide to pass a law under Bill C-61, the minister's regulations will become our law on reserve. This is one reason we say Bill C-61 is like the Indian Act. It imposes federal law on us, disguised as a promise of self-government.
We will not let this happen again.
Thank you.