Review of the Navigation Protection Act and First Nations

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Review of the Navigation Protection Act and First Nations October 26, 2016 Québec Assembly of First Nations 1

Overview Navigation Protection Act (NPA) Formerly Navigable Waters Protection Act (NWPA) Key Changes to NPA (2014) Legislative Review Process Preliminary Understanding of the Review Indigenous Participation Issues for First Nations S. 35, FPIC, UNDRIP AFN Resolution and next steps Source: www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/06/20/liberals-launch-public-reviews-ofenvironmental-assessments-national-energy-board.html Assembly of First Nations 2

The Navigation Protection Act Legislative Background and Key Changes Assembly of First Nations 3

Legislative Background 2012 Omnibus budget legislation Changes to various pieces of legislation that apply to the review of projects Included amendments to the Navigable Waters Protection Act (NWPA) 2014 Navigation Protection Act (NPA) came into force replacing NWPA 2016 NPA Review expected to commence in the fall and report the outcomes in early 2017 Assembly of First Nations 4

Navigable Waters Protection Act One of the oldest federal environmental laws, enacted in 1882 NWPA protected 2 million lakes and rivers, essentially any waterway that could float a canoe NWPA regulated works on, over, under, through or across navigable waters including obstructions to navigation, as well as depositing materials such as gravel and mine tailings that risked impacting navigation Assembly of First Nations 5

Navigation Protection Act Amendments came into force April 1, 2014 Regulates the construction, placement, alteration, repairing and rebuilding of works in, on, over, under, through or across navigable waters Protection includes three oceans, 97 lakes and 62 rivers List of Scheduled Waters (Online: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/n-22/fulltext.html#h-27) Assembly of First Nations 6

Key Changes to NPA 2014 New Schedule of lists includes 162 navigable water ways where people must apply for regulatory authorization for works that interfere with navigation (previously applied to all waterways in Canada where you could float a canoe) Owners of new works in non-scheduled navigable waters have the opportunity to request to opt-in to the NPA regime Authorizations issued under the NPA not subject to a specific duration unless specified in a term and condition Onus now on owner to notify the Minister if a work causes or is likely to cause a serious and imminent danger to navigation Assembly of First Nations 7

NPA Legislative Review Process 2016-2017 Assembly of First Nations 8

Preliminary Understanding of the NPA Review Review by the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities Fall 2016 Appearances before the Committee, submission of briefs, and/or online submissions (TBC)* Indigenous Participant funding window - deadline passed September 23. Early 2017 Committee Report Process *Information derived from Transport Canada presentation Sept 2016 FNQLSDI Sessions Assembly of First Nations 9

Other Opportunities to Provide Feedback All Canadians are encouraged to provide views, following Committee guidelines, directly to the Committee http://www.parl.gc.ca/about/house/witnessesguides/guide-brief-e.htm If preferred, Canadians may submit any concerns or suggested improvements to the NPA review team at NPPHQ-PPNAC@tc.gc.ca More information is available at www.canada.ca/environmentalreviews Departmental officials will support the review with additional opportunities (e.g. on-line consultation, speaking engagements, meetings) *Information derived from Transport Canada presentation Sept 2016 FNQLSDI Sessions Assembly of First Nations 10

Issues for First Nations Concerning the Environmental Review Assembly of First Nations 11

First Nations have constitutionally protected Aboriginal Rights to ownership and jurisdiction over water Duty to Consult (Federal and Provincial) Crown cannot delegate to a third party Free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) Self-determination Inherent Rights S. 35, UNDRIP Source: http://www.ictinc.ca/blog/section-35-of-the-constitution-act-1982 Assembly of First Nations 12

Origins of the Duty to Consult and Accommodate Inherent Rights rights pre-existing to colonization recognized in s.35 of the Constitution Act Treaties Aboriginal title & rights identified in treaties give rise to duties to consult & accommodate according to the given Treaty Modern treaties or self-government agreements also identify these duties Common Law recognition standard in court decisions, full enunciation of duties still evolving 2014 Tsilhqot in decision set precedence in declaration of Aboriginal title Assembly of First Nations 13

Critical Factors in Consultation Both the federal and provincial Crowns have a duty to consult. The Crown cannot delegate its fiduciary obligation to consult to a third party. Consultation must genuinely attempt to address First Nations concerns about the impact of an action on their rights, and have no predetermined outcome. Accommodation is the reconciliation of the sovereignty of the Crown with pre-existing rights of First Nations. Assembly of First Nations 14

Principles of First Nations Consent Principle reflected in First Nations law and policy and is supported by the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which recognizes that the free, prior, and informed consent of First Nations is required: for development activities on First Nations traditional lands in the development of legislative or administrative measures affecting First Nations The UN Declaration recognizes that the right to self-determination including the right to consent and to withhold consent is held by each First Nation Currently, under Canadian Common Law, consent is required in the instance of established rights and where the infringement is determined to be significant determination of infringement impacts must be made with First Nations; cannot be done unilaterally Assembly of First Nations 15

The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) Article 25 of The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) declares Indigenous Peoples have the right to maintain and strengthen their distinctive spiritual relationship with their traditionally owned and otherwise occupied and used lands, territories, waters and coastal seas and other resources and to uphold their responsibilities to future generations in this regard. Article 32 (2): States shall consult and cooperate in good faith with the Indigenous Peoples concerning through their own representative institutions in order to obtain their free and informed consent prior to the approval of any project affecting their lands or territories and other resources, particularly in connection with the development, utilization or exploitation of mineral, water or other resources. Article 32 (3): States shall provide effective mechanisms for just and fair redress for any such activities, and appropriate measures shall be taken to mitigate adverse environmental, economic, social, cultural or spiritual impact. Assembly of First Nations 16

Legislative & Policy Development Crown must consult First Nations on policies or bills that may affect rights & interests - This is often relegated to parliamentary processes that do not fulfill the duty Legal duty exists in addition to consultation as a matter of good public policy Unilateral Crown approach which may infringe First Nations rights will be subject to judicial scrutiny carrying the risk of a Crown decision or activity being held to be void or unenforceable Such an approach is clearly counter-productive resulting in delay, high costs to all involved, ineffective policy development and ongoing implementation issues Assembly of First Nations 17

First Nations Input Previous work has identified key areas for inclusion in federal approach: Focus on key federal regulatory frameworks that impede First Nations free, prior and informed consent by shrouding transparency of decisions through Cabinet / PM approvals (CEAA, 2012, NEBA). Coordination of federal and provincial assessment regimes has left out First Nations must be fully engaged. Assembly of First Nations 18

Waters removal from title of the legislation signals move away from EA Navigability of waters criteria is murky it depends upon Ministerial tests for an aqueous highway Dewatering is prohibited yet still we are now hearing from First Nations like the Mikisew Cree about the damage being done to World Heritage sites like the Peace River. Of 162/8500 rivers and 97/2,000,000 lakes in Canada and 3 oceans are scheduled in the interest of safety. All other drinking water sources, fish spawning, shellfish and aquatic plant habitats are considered better used for containing mine tailings, causeway footings and other works What constitutes an obstruction in the case of stone fishing weirs and First Nations communities themselves. Assembly of First Nations 19

First Nations Inclusion in the Review of Environmental and Regulatory Processes Assembly of First Nations 20

Key Points in AFN Resolution 35/2016 AFN to advocate that any approach to environmental assessment and protection must respect First Nations Treaties, rights, title and jurisdiction, and recognize our responsibilities to our traditional territories. Support First Nations locally and regionally to fully engage in the review of the environmental and regulatory processes, along with other measures meant to affirm First Nations roles as stewards of their lands. Mandate the AFN to seek the immediate release of information and resources from federal and provincial/territorial governments to engage in dialogue on the review processes and any new policies or regulations that may be created as a result of those reviews. Assembly of First Nations 21

What s next at the AFN Ongoing (2015-2020) As part of the strategic planning for the AFN - provide analysis and information on legislative, policy and regulatory change and identify potential impacts/infringements to First Nations Analysis/Legislative reviews (Fisheries Act, Navigation Protection Act, CEAA, and NEB) Advocate for UNDRIP articles, specifically proper engagement, consultation and accommodation based on FPIC Nov 2016 National Fisheries Committee meetings Dec 2016 - AFN Special Chiefs Assembly Assembly of First Nations 22

ASSEMBLY OF FIRST NATIONS 55 Metcalfe Street, Suite 1600, Ottawa, ON K1P 6L5 Telephone: 613-241-6789 Toll-free: 1-866-869-6789 Fax: 613-241-5808 www.afn.ca Thank you Merci

Tania D. Monaghan tmonaghan@afn.ca ASSEMBLY OF FIRST NATIONS 55 Metcalfe Street, Suite 1600, Ottawa, ON K1P 6L5 Telephone: 613-241-6789 Toll-free: 1-866-869-6789 Fax: 613-241-5808 www.afn.ca Assembly of First Nations 24