Ottawa Watch
BY ALEXANDRA MACQUEEN
FOR THE FIRST PERSPECTIVE
Here it is again, the end of a year, and time to look back at
what got accomplished and what didn't during 2002.
In January, Indian Affairs Minister Robert Nault appeared before
the House of Commons Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs,
Northern Development and Natural Resources to discuss and answer
questions on the federal budget. He was questioned by members
of parliament about his department's plans for the current and
coming fiscal years. One set of comments seems, in retrospect,
to have set the tone for 2002. Winnipeg Centre MP Pat Martin,
of the New Democratic Party, said "many of us were heartened
to believe that this budgetary era would be the time when we finally
address some of these long-standing [Aboriginal] issues.
Then the events of September 11 came along, and it would seem
to us [that] we're going to pay for our new security measures
on the back of the people who can least afford it-people living
in third world conditions in Aboriginal communities who have been
waiting patiently for all these long years to finally have their
issues addressed."
In February, we noted that Minister Nault had been quiet in the
House of Commons. We checked in on the status of Bill C-37, the
proposed act to facilitate the implementation of claims settlements
in Alberta and Saskatchewan. And Alliance Senator Gerry St. Germain
introduced a private member's bill "declaring the Crown's
recognition of self-government for the first nations of Canada."
The draft bill is intended to provide an optional "escape
hatch" from the Indian Act for First Nations.
In March, we reported on the House of Commons Standing Committee
on Aboriginal Affairs hearings on the Indian Act. The committee
was "educating [themselves] so that we start from the same
starting point if and when the Minister tables legislation on
governance." Senator St. Germain's bill on First Nations'
self-government hit the second reading stage in the Senate, and
a private members' bill (introduced in December 2001) to recognize
and exonerate Louis Riel also hit second reading. Bill S-35 would
"honour Louis Riel as a Metis patriot and a Canadian hero,
vacate his conviction for high treason and establish May 12 as
Louis Riel Day."
In April, we looked in detail at what the witnesses before the
House Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs were telling the
committee members about the Indian Act. In particular, we looked
at how Indian Affairs, the Assembly of First Nations and the Congress
of Aboriginal Peoples define the "Indian Act problem,"
what they say the solution is, and where the governance initiative
fits.
Then it was May, and spring, and we were looking for signs of
new growth in Ottawa. We examined the studies being undertaken
by the House and Senate Standing Committees on Aboriginal issues
on programming for Aboriginal children on and off reserve. Both
the Senate committee and this House of Commons sub-committee have
been carrying out long-term, detailed studies of the issues and
circumstances facing Aboriginal children and youth throughout
Canada.
At the half-year mark, we reported on the introduction of two
pieces of draft legislation which are considered to be Prime Minister
Jean Chretien's "legacy" initiatives on aboriginal issues.
Bill C-60, a bill to establish the Canadian Centre for the Independent
Resolution of First Nations Specific Claims, was introduced in
the House of Commons on June 13, 2002. Bill C-61, the First Nations
Governance Act, followed on June 14. Then the House broke for
the summer recess.
July saw us reviewing the parliamentary reaction to Bill C-60,
which would establish the Canadian Centre for the Independent
Resolution of First Nations Specific Claims. Looking forward,
Richard Marceau, a Bloc Quebecois MP, said it would be "truly
unfortunate if the government used its powers to prorogue the
current session at some point during the fall and left First Nations
out in the cold for long months by letting them down once again
with broken promises and failed commitments. It would be ironic,
to say the least, to hear once again the Governor General solemnly
reaffirm the clear and true will of the government to promote
the development of Aboriginal communities. These lofty words have
been used too often without leading to any action."
By August, Minister Nault had announced the draft "Fiscal
and Statistical Management Act" would be introduced in the
House of Commons in the fall. And we also reported on an innovative
proposal for ensuring the representation of First Nations communities
within a single federal riding in the province of New Brunswick.
Under the proposal by the electoral review commission in New Brunswick,
all Indian reserves in the province, no matter what their location,
would be grouped into the single electoral district of Miramichi.
In September, as predicted, the existing session of parliament
was "prorogued," or formally brought to an end. The
new session was launched on September 30 with a Speech from the
Throne setting out governmental priorities and commitments. The
prorogation of parliament wiped out the parliamentary slate for
all unfinished business, including the proposed Specific Claims
Resolution Act and the First Nations Governance Act.
October was taken up with reacting to the Throne Speech. The Governance
Act and the Specific Claims Act were also reinstated.
Then it was November and what we heard about was the newly reformed
House Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs, and the parliamentary
schedule for the claims bill and the Governance Act, as well as
the anticipated First Nation Fiscal and Statistical Management
Act. In early December, Bill C-19, the fiscal bill, was formally
introduced in the House of Commons.
Put it all together and what do you have? On the surface, what
you have seems to be slow parliamentary progress towards the entrenchment
of a new set of standards and institutions, consistent with the
Prime Minister's personal vision of his legacy. Much of this progress
seems to involve covering the same ground repeatedly: introducing
legislation in one session of parliament, only to have it die
off and be reintroduced in the next session.
There is room for individual action, such as private member's
bills on topics which are vitally important to individual members
of parliament. And there is room for reflection, through deeper
discussion and longer-term study, such as the House of Commons
and Senate committee investigations of aboriginal youth issues.
But all of this also seems to be occurring in a larger context
of "reasonableness" and timelessness. In May, when during
a House subcommittee hearing on programming for Aboriginal youth,
Alliance MP Larry Spencer (from the Regina area) commented to
a witness that "you've spoken of everything from lifestyle
choice -that is, use of alcohol and tobacco- to food availability.
How do you suppose a government can get its hands around that
massive kind of problem? It seems you're almost asking that these
people be provided for in every way. It seems overwhelming...And
if we looked at it that way, what could be done?"
The witness, Dr. Jeff Reading of the Canadian Institute of Health
Research, responded that "this is not a problem that was
created by Aboriginal people...It's an historic problem and a
political problem and it's embedded in the political economy of
how Canada became a nation state.
There was a very messy situation with residential schools, which
was really failed forced assimilation of people, and we have a
very messy cleanup job to do as a result of that failure...Turning
around and blaming aboriginal communities for a problem and being
a burden on the Canadian taxpayer is simply inappropriate."
Dr. Reading added, "Canada could eliminate this problem rather
rapidly, but we choose to tolerate the suffering."
How long will we - all of us - continue to be reasonable in the
face of suffering? How long will we operate as if the time we
have to do our "messy cleanup job" is infinite, and
the job can be endlessly deferred? That is a different discussion
than the one that takes place publicly (as reported in the House
and Senate debates and journals) in the hallowed halls of parliament.
Instead, what we had was a year in which there was a lot of discussion,
but maybe not a lot of discussion that made any difference. When
we don't engage in a conversation that makes a difference, then
we are, all of us, left (coincident with the Christmas season)
waiting for a miracle.
Alexandra Macqueen is a communications and government relations
consultant based in Toronto, Ontario. You can reach Alexandra
by e-mail at OttawaWatch@whamco.net.