I understand the need for us to be guided by the principles of free, prior and informed consent. I think it's an important thing.
I worked in first nations communities most of my life before becoming a member of Parliament, and I know that difficult choices have to be made by chief and council. Sometimes they have to prioritize the best interests of all community members. Sometimes they will have individuals in their community who say that they didn't consent to that.
My fear is that the inclusion of this amendment is only in the circumstance where a chief and council has not made a decision whether they want to go to federal or provincial water standards. My fear is that having this kind of language sets up community members to challenge their own chief and council and say, “I didn't agree with the co-operation and consultation that was done with my chief and council. They don't have my consent.” It could be one community member saying, “They did not have my consent.”
If my knowledge around consent is correct, you have to have a willing person to give you that consent. If one person in that community says that they don't give that consent, will that tie this up in terms of the community being able to get clean water? By consent are we talking about a band council resolution? That can be passed pretty easily, but can a community member say that they didn't give their consent for that band council resolution? It ties it up and needs that community to do a ratification of that vote.
As someone who has seen a lot of votes, chiefs and councils in my lifetime, I'm scared that this clause inserted in there may have the actual impact of community members challenging their local leadership. Not having clear, defined consent and what that means in this thing, I'm scared it's going to tie it up in potential legal matters, where we have people going to court against their own community members, whatever their argument is toward that, so that community couldn't access first nations clean water and first nations in an efficient way.
That's my concern with this. It's introducing new language within something that is not predefined within the Indian Act.
If you were to say it requires a band council resolution as opposed to consent, I might be inclined to support that. However, the word “consent” in itself doesn't have that built-in mechanism where chiefs and councils can make a decision.
I'm scared we're inserting a word into legislation that chiefs and councils will have to debate their own community members on. This could lead to delays in first nations having clean water. That's why I'm thinking we need to have a little bit more discussion about that.
I'll ask the technicians.
This is based on my being in first nations communities and working in first nations communities for more than 20 years. Do we have a way to say that consent has been given by a community that meets what this legislation would put forward?