logo
First Nations call for Ontario environment minister's resignation

First Nations call for Ontario environment minister's resignation

TORONTO – Several dozen First Nations in Ontario are calling for the resignation of the province's environment minister after he asked the federal government to not reintroduce a bill that would enshrine clean drinking water rights in law.
Last month, Todd McCarthy and Alberta Environment Minister Rebecca Schulz wrote to federal Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin asking her to move away from legislation that they say would delay project development and undermine competitiveness.
They singled out Bill C-61, legislation introduced in the last Parliament that sought to ensure First Nations have access to clean drinking water and can protect fresh water sources on their territories.
The bill faced a lengthy committee process but was not passed into law before Parliament was prorogued earlier this year, and Dabrusin said last week that her government plans to reintroduce it.
Anishinabek Nation Grand Chief Linda Debassige says she is shocked and disappointed that McCarthy would oppose the codification in law of First Nations' right to clean drinking water.
Currently on hiatus
A review of funny, uplifting news in Winnipeg and around the globe.
McCarthy's office says the intention of the letter was to make clear that Ottawa needs to ensure a regulatory environment that supports economic growth, adding that Ontario has always supported clean drinking water in all First Nations.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

On course to miss emissions targets, Ontario asks feds to repeal climate laws
On course to miss emissions targets, Ontario asks feds to repeal climate laws

Global News

time37 minutes ago

  • Global News

On course to miss emissions targets, Ontario asks feds to repeal climate laws

Ontario's environment minister is feeling the heat after writing to his federal counterpart asking Ottawa to repeal a slew of climate laws, only a few months after briefing documents showed his government was set to miss its own emissions targets. A joint letter from Alberta Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Rebecca Schulz and Ontario's Todd McCarthy asked the federal government to withdraw a series of existing laws to boost the economy. The pair asked the federal Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin to consider scrapping the Impact Assessment Act, clean electricity regulations and the legislation behind the carbon tax. The letter also asked her to change the Species At Risk Act, which gives the federal government the power to intervene when certain habitats are in danger. Those laws, Alberta and Ontario wrote, 'undermine competitiveness' and don't serve an environmental purpose. Story continues below advertisement 'Canada is poised to be an economic superpower, but achieving that potential depends on strong, constitutionally grounded provincial authority over resource development and environmental management,' Schulz and McCarthy wrote. Ontario Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said, if the feds accepted the recommendation, the province would be left without meaningful climate protection. 'If you remove all the federal regulations and you combine that with the fact that the Ford government is ploughing ahead with these special economic zones, it means basically the Ford government is proposing that we create a province without any environmental protections,' he said. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The letter comes just a couple of months after civil servants warned McCarthy Ontario was on course to miss its emissions targets. A briefing slide prepared for the incoming environment minister in March charted how Ontario had slipped away from its emissions targets and, according to modelling early this year, will now miss them by around three megatonnes. The latest figures were calculated in January 2025 and obtained by Global News using freedom of information laws. View image in full screen A slide prepared to brief Todd McCarthy in March, 2025. Global News Schreiner said the letter was evidence the province had no intention of correcting course. Story continues below advertisement 'Ontario already isn't going to meet its pollution reduction targets, and this letter confirms that the Ford government doesn't even want to attempt or pretend like it's going to meet our pollution reduction targets,' he said. McCarthy's office did not answer questions asking about the effects of repealing the laws or whether reducing emissions was a primary objective of the ministry. 'The intention of the letter was to make clear the urgent need for the federal government to ensure a regulatory environment that supports economic growth,' a spokesperson said. The same letter to the federal government also urged Ottawa not to reintroduce legislation governing safe drinking water, specifically Bill C-61. The legislation was introduced in the last Parliament and sought to ensure First Nations have access to clean drinking water and can protect fresh water sources on their territories. The bill faced a lengthy committee process but was not passed into law before Parliament was prorogued earlier this year, and Dabrusin said last week that her government plans to reintroduce it. Several First Nations in Ontario have called for McCarthy to resign over the request. Ontario NDP Leader Marit Stiles said she couldn't understand the Ford government's logic for making the ask in the first place. Story continues below advertisement 'Why is the Ford government standing in the way of getting clean drinking water to First Nations? First Nations in Ontario have been under boil water advisories for decades,' she said in a statement. 'In fact, Ontario has the highest number of drinking water advisories in Canada. Clean drinking water is a right, not a luxury.' The government said it 'supported the right to clean drinking water' and that the letter did not represent an 'either-or proposition.' — with files from The Canadian Press

In the news today: U.S. smoke complaints, Vancouver safety review, weak condo market
In the news today: U.S. smoke complaints, Vancouver safety review, weak condo market

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

In the news today: U.S. smoke complaints, Vancouver safety review, weak condo market

Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed… Republicans call on Canada to curb wildfires Six Republican lawmakers have sent a letter to Canada's ambassador calling for action on the wildfires, sending smoke billowing across the international border into their states. In a Tuesday letter to Ambassador to the U.S. Kirsten Hillman, representatives Tom Tiffany, Brad Finstad, Tom Emmer, Michelle Fischbach, Glenn Grothman and Pete Stauber of Wisconsin and Minnesota said their constituents are coping with suffocating smoke from Canadian wildfires. Natural Resources Canada said wildfire is a global problem caused by the effects of climate change, including prolonged drought. 'This is why the government of Canada, during its G7 presidency this year, led the development of the Kananaskis Wildfire Charter — the first leader-level wildfire initiative aimed at preventing, responding to and recovering from wildland fire,' Marie Martin, a department spokesperson, said in a statement. The office of Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski has not yet responded to a request for comment. Festival tragedy prompts safety review B.C. wide Terry Yung says that when he attends Vancouver's Chinatown Festival this weekend, he'll enjoy himself knowing that the work has been done to make him and other attendees feel safe. British Columbia's minister of state for community safety said pursuing that sense of security was 'the foundation' of a report he released Wednesday making six recommendations on improving safety for community events in the wake of the April 26 attack on Vancouver's Lapu Lapu Day festival, that killed 11 people and injured dozens more. Yung said the point of the report was 'not to look at one moment in time in the past which we cannot change.' 'I can't speculate what could or could have happened but what we can do in future to make us all safer,' he said. The report by former B.C. Supreme Court chief justice Christopher Hinkson recommends that all public events, regardless of size, should be supported by a risk assessment, and that a provincial events hub be developed for sharing information and advice. Weak condo market holding back move-up buyers While optimism is building in some parts of Canada for a rebound in the real estate market, condominium dwellers wanting to move up to a larger space face tough choices amid little sign of improvement for that segment. Cities like Toronto and Vancouver have seen condo sales drop off, if not stagnate, in recent years following a rush of new supply opening up and plummeting investor demand. For some regions, that marks a divergence from the overall real estate picture. Many industry watchers are now forecasting a turnaround in the housing market in the coming months after the first half of 2025 was plagued by economic uncertainty related to tariffs and job losses. It's left those looking to leave condo life behind and upgrade to a house in a tough spot: sell now at a lower than anticipated value, or wait out the storm. Alberta to update rules on school library books Alberta's education minister is set to provide an update today on the development of new provincial rules for school library books. Demetrios Nicolaides announced in May that Alberta would be setting new standards for the books. He said the review came after his ministry became aware of four coming-of-age graphic novels in school libraries in Edmonton and Calgary. Nicolaides said each of the books contained inappropriate content, including graphic sexual material as well as depictions of molestation, drug and alcohol use. A government survey on the topic launched after Nicolaides's announcement found that the majority of respondents across demographics didn't support the government setting new standards for library books. South Asian music festival during Stampede For those who don't necessarily want to kick up their cowboy boots at the Calgary Stampede, there's Stampede Mela. It bills itself as the largest 18+ South Asian music festival in North America and begins Friday at Fort Calgary, not far from the midway ferris wheel of the Stampede itself. 'Probably about four or five years ago, we actually decided that we wanted to do something in the South Asian music space in Calgary because Stampede has become quite a big music festival scene,' organizer Amar Duhra said in an interview. 'Our goal was to bring some representation from the South Asian community. 'We want to bring a more multicultural approach to the Stampede instead of the usual rodeo-style country music.' N.L. bottle note found in Ireland 13 years later A romantic message in a bottle thrown from the cliffs of an island off Newfoundland nearly 13 years ago was found on a beach in Ireland this week — and the couple behind it are still in love. Brad and Anita Squires had been dating for about a year when they decided to end a quiet September picnic on Bell Island in 2012 by casting a message out to sea. 'Today we enjoyed dinner, this bottle of wine and each other on the edge of the island,' Anita wrote on a piece of lined paper before stuffing it into the bottle. Brad stood up and hurled it into the waters of Conception Bay. 'I gave it everything I had,' he said in an interview Wednesday. 'We didn't see it hit the water, it was too high up … I just assumed it smashed on the rocks.' It didn't. — This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 10, 2025

First Nations call for Ontario environment minister's resignation
First Nations call for Ontario environment minister's resignation

Toronto Star

time2 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

First Nations call for Ontario environment minister's resignation

TORONTO - Several dozen First Nations in Ontario called for the resignation of the province's environment minister Wednesday after he asked the federal government to not reintroduce a bill that would enshrine clean drinking water rights in law. Last month, Todd McCarthy and Alberta Environment Minister Rebecca Schulz wrote to federal Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin asking her to move away from legislation that they say would 'delay project development and undermine competitiveness.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store