CANADA
Heated debate on clean drinking water legislation leads to accusations of stereotyping
During a debate in the House of Commons Saskatoon Conservative MP Kevin Waugh said tensions were high in First Nations communities who do not have clean drinking water and remain under a boil water advisory.
“The previous Conservative government left eight and a half years ago and there are still over 100 water advisories on First Nations,” he said.
“In my home province of Saskatchewan, I have seen reserves burn down water treatment plants because the Liberal government has done little or nothing.”
The comments were made during a debate on Bill C-61, also known as the First Nations Clean Water Act, on Monday.
The Liberal Minister of Indigenous Services took issue with Waugh’s comments, made by a Saskatchewan Conservative MP during a debate on the government’s new First Nations water legislation, accusing him of negative “stereotyping.”
“Well the implication that people would burn water treatment plants out of spite, out of anger at the government, out of a sense of wanton destruction – I think came through loud and clear in his comments,” Patty Hajdu said outside the House of Commons on Tuesday.
“I will just say that we see acts of arson in non-Indigenous communities as well. So, there is a stereotype that somehow Indigenous people don’t take care of the equipment or the housing or the community infrastructure and that is a long standing very harmful and hurtful stereotype.”
Waugh later added, “The other thing is that there needs to be education provided for people on reserve to operate these water treatment plants, which is part of the problem we have seen with the government over the last eight and a half years.”
Ending off the heated exchange, Hajdu accused the Conservative MP of using the debate to further historical negative stereotypes of First Nations people.
“Trust a Conservative member to blame First Nations people for burning down their own water treatment plants and for not being smart enough to be able to understand how to operate those plants,” she said
“That is the kind of paternalism that led to 105 long-term boil water advisories. They were just not worth investing in, I guess.”
The Liberals have faced a lot of criticism for failing to deliver on a 2015 commitment to end all long-term drinking water advisories on First Nations by March 2021. Access to clean drinking water remains an issue for many communities. According to the Indigenous Services Canada website, there were 28 long-term drinking water advisories in place on First Nations as of Jan. 19 of this year and five of these were in Saskatchewan.
Bill C-61 was introduced just before Christmas with a stated intent to protect water sources, create minimum drinking water standards and provide sustainable funding for water quality on First Nations.
The clean drinking water legislation currently sits at second reading in the House of Commons.
Media reports show there were two water treatment plants destroyed by fires on First Nations in Saskatchewan in recent years.
One in Carry the Kettle Nakoda Nation in 2019 and the other in Piapot First Nation in 2018. The causes of the fires were undetermined in earlier media reports.
APTN News reached out to Kevin Waugh’s office for clarification on his comments in the House of Commons on Monday but did not hear back by press time.
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