Thank you, Chair.
My name is Dr. Joss Reimer. As president of the Canadian Medical Association, the CMA, I'm grateful for this opportunity to speak about the direct link between water and health.
As a public health physician, I was trained in the topic of water quality and am very familiar with the various factors that can make water unsafe.
Canada holds much of the world's fresh water. It is our responsibility to protect this critical resource for future generations. The CMA is committed to working in partnership and reciprocity with indigenous peoples to advance reconciliation in health care.
Indigenous health is intrinsically linked to the health of the land and water. Without protecting remaining clean water sources, we risk environmental damage and loss of life.
Water insecurity is a matter of life and death for many indigenous communities. In addition to the infectious risks of unsafe water, long-term drinking water advisories have been linked to higher suicide rates in first nations communities, exposing the lethal cost of inaction.
“Water is life” is a truth that must guide us to protect indigenous rights and this sacred resource. It's a plea for action. We must protect these communities to ensure that everyone thrives and not just survives.
We look to the government to invest in health priorities identified by indigenous organizations to achieve measurable, ongoing improvements in health and wellness. We must listen to the voices of indigenous communities calling for careful reconsideration of its provision to ensure self-determined maintenance of essential drinking water and waste-water infrastructure.
The CMA supports the amendments raised by chiefs and first nations, specifically acknowledging that access to drinking water as a fundamental human right, and we urge the swift passage of Bill C-61.
Chair, the CMA has long believed that health is a basic human right. Ensuring safe and sufficient drinking water is essential to better health and wellness. We rarely learn about the toxicity of source water in medical school, but those who work in indigenous communities see the impact first-hand. As a public health physician, I myself have issued many temporary boil water advisories in my career. Seeing the disruption that a short-term advisory can have on the daily lives of community members and businesses makes it all the more striking to consider that this is a daily reality for many indigenous communities.
Everyone in Canada, including those who live in remote and indigenous communities, should have the same confidence in the quality of their water supply as those who are living here in Ottawa. It is not lost on me that we are here in this space with clear, clean drinking water in front of us today.
We want families, no matter where they live, to be able to fill their glasses with potable water, free from toxins. Everyone should be able to cook with water that enriches their health and does not endanger it. They should be without fear of exposure to harmful contaminants. Who shouldn't be able to teach their children that water is a source of life and not a potential hazard?
Representing the physicians of Canada, the CMA strives to build sustainable health care systems inclusive of indigenous knowledge. We call on governments to prioritize and invest in policies that address the determinants of health, including the historical and ongoing impacts of colonization, income, education, employment, food security and, indeed, safe water.
Addressing water security and climate resiliency is also key to closing the health disparities between indigenous and non-indigenous communities. Protecting water security goes hand in hand with confronting climate change. It's a crisis that strikes indigenous communities hardest and threatens their way of life. The factors that drive climate change and poor health are closely connected.
Indigenous peoples face a dire lack of health services, particularly in remote communities, and they experience anti-indigenous racism in our health systems. They experience a lack of cultural safety and a disregard for indigenous health and healing models.
In conclusion, Bill C-61 is a step toward ensuring clean water and better health outcomes for all. We support the legislation's commitment to establishing safe water infrastructure in, on and under first nations lands, in co-operation with first nations and in a way that is consistent with Canada's obligations to first nations. Improving health outcomes for indigenous peoples must start with indigenous voices leading the way.
I thank you for your time today.