Certainly, and thank you for that.
It's nice to see you this morning. I can't help but remember your dad as he walked these chambers. My heart goes out to you and your family, and I send my sincere condolences on his passing.
I'm glad that we're sitting here together today. It's nice to see all of you.
I have to say that this is a very important moment for first nations in Canada. I know that there was an old bill, and we're repealing it. Let's not go back to the way that bill was done in the past. It was very hurtful towards first nations. I also know that co-development isn't easy, and I know we're here and talking about amendments to this bill.
In growing up on a first nation community when I was a little girl, I could easily drink from the water. I grew up there. I know that we've come a long way in first nations communities, but we haven't come far enough. I think, after watching the way the first piece of this was done, that had it been done right back then, I don't think we would have been sitting here today. We would have been on a different track. We're here now, and we're here now together. We're here to try to work towards a bill that we can agree on. We heard the amendments from many speakers before me, and I think that if we can put some of those pieces into this legislation, we'll move this along very quickly.
At the same time, I know that first nations have never ceded their jurisdiction over their traditional waterways or source water. The United Nations General Assembly recognizes the “human right to water and sanitation” and the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment. We don't have that right now, so I know that legislation is a necessary tool to ensure meaningful change to the current water crisis faced by first nations across Canada.
Legislation and how it's developed are critical to the quality of life and self-determination of first nations. The process involves more than consultation, however: It requires co-operation and working together in good faith. This is the core of co-development that speaks to a two-way collaborative process. This is the foundation of the commitment Canada has made through section 5 of the federal UN declaration act, UNDA, which requires the following: the proposed legislation must meet this bar. All eyes will be upon it to assess whether it does that and whether Canada is sincere in the commitments made in UNDA.
This is an important moment for first nations in Canada. I know that on a first nation, we don't have the simple things that many Canadians take for granted. I've lived in two first nation communities. In either place where I've lived, I've never had access to clean drinking water. I'm so used to drinking bottled water that it's sometimes hard, when you come off reserve, to have to drink water like this water that is beside me here today, because we're so used to drinking bottled water. I think that's the reality for many first nations in this country, and I look to a time when we can fix that.
It also disheartens me when I see fishermen in Lake Winnipeg. I have to say that the first nations fishermen in Winnipeg are pulling up nets that are full of stuff. We have to do better in this country. On the waters, it's starting to show. The animals are starting to show us that. Our people are starting to show us that.
I look forward to working with all of you to find that path forward, and I think this is a right step in that direction to move in a good way together.
Thank you.