Thursday, January 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Indigenous Services minister to address Assembly of First Nations gathering today

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2025 11:06 AM
  • Indigenous Services minister to address Assembly of First Nations gathering today

A group of Ontario chiefs said Wednesday the federal government should immediately reintroduce the clean drinking water legislation that failed to pass before the election was called last spring.

Prime Minister Mark Carney told the special chiefs assembly of the Assembly of First Nations on Tuesday that new drinking water legislation would be introduced in the spring, but Anishinabek Nation Grand Chief Linda Debassige said delaying it until then is "not acceptable."

"First Nations have waited too long," she said, in a press conference on Parliament Hill.

Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty said last summer a new water bill would come this fall but the government appears to be now preparing for that not to happen for several more months.

Bill C-61 had passed second reading and cleared the committee stage in the House of Commons but was not debated at third reading before the 44th Parliament ended for the election. All bills not yet passed die when an election is called.

Debassige said she was involved in the development of Bill C-61, which would have recognized and affirmed the inherent right of First Nations to jurisdiction over water, including drinking water and wastewater, set minimum national standards for the delivery of drinking water and wastewater services on First Nations, and provide funding to meet at least the minimum requirements under a drinking water class action settlement reached in 2021.

Debassige said chiefs have heard the government is looking at removing certain protections that were in the original bill.

“We are hearing that the government is looking at removing source water protection out of the legislation. We're hearing that there will be a removal as it relates to cisterns and wells … the regulations and standards there too,” Debassige said.

The federal government was reporting 38 active long term boil-water advisories on First Nations as of Oct. 15. Twenty-seven of those advisories are in Ontario; the boil water advisory in Neskantaga First Nation has been in place for 30 years.

Neskantaga Chief Gary Quisess said that while the provincial government looks to advance the Ring of Fire mining project on Neskantaga land, people in his community have been for decades using 1.5 litre bottles of water to drink, cook and bathe.

“That’s our homelands, and here we're treated like Third World. I am in the Third World, and here projects are getting to be pushed upon us,” Quisess said.

“We don't have to live like this. A lot of developments get benefit from our lands. And here we are suffering for water.”

Water is among the critical issues being discussed at the special chiefs assembly this week in Ottawa, along with child welfare reform and Canada's new major projects push.

Gull-Masty was set to address the event on Wednesday, when she's expected to discuss proposed changes to the Indian Act after senators made sweeping amendments to a bill that would see an unknown number of new people eligible for status.

Carney spoke at the event Tuesday and promised to meet with Coastal First Nations leaders after chiefs voted unanimously to press the government to uphold the B.C. oil tanker ban and withdraw an agreement with Alberta that clears a path for a new oil pipeline.

Sen. Paul Prosper and former national chief Perry Bellegarde are also scheduled to speak at Wednesday's AFN gathering.

On Wednesday morning, chiefs gathered in Ottawa honoured the late Elijah Harper, a key opponent of the Meech Lake accord.

Harper, a member of Red Sucker Lake First Nation, decried the accord over a lack of consultation with First Nations and famously held up a feather as he voted against debating the constitutional deal in the Manitoba legislature.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP
Ontario Provincial Police say a British Columbia man has been arrested in a historic sexual assault investigation spanning nearly three decades and involving four alleged victims, three of whom were teens at the time.

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment
Former Conservative senator Don Meredith was found not guilty on all counts in an Ottawa courtroom this morning.

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president
Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump pointed and smiled at one another as they sat down to dinner together in South Korea on Wednesday - their first in-person interaction since Trump abruptly ended trade talks last week.

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures
A former deputy premier of Alberta says the success of a petition he circulated to make it official policy for the province to stay in Canada should signal to Premier Danielle Smith that she needs to put separatism to bed.

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting
British Columbia Attorney General Niki Sharma says the provincial government's argument in the landmark Cowichan Tribes land case was that Aboriginal and fee-simple title "cannot co-exist" on the same land in their full form.

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on other parties to support legislation he says would combat intimate partner violence.

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence