Issue 2: One River Many Relations

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One River

Many RELATIONS

Summer 2013: Issue 2

Environment, Health and Indigenous Communities in Alberta and the Northwest Territories

Comparing Water Policy in Northern Alberta and NWT Bruce Maclean & Tim Heron bruce.maclean@mcfngir.ca

ers to the Slave River and beyond. Bruce Maclean and Tim Heron discuss differences in official water related policies between Alberta and NWT. Bruce Maclean is a consultant for Mikisew Cree First Nation and the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation in Fort Chipewyan, Alberta. He lives in Winnipeg, MB.

Bruce Maclean Winter 2012. Photo courtesy of Andrew Miller.

Northern Alberta and NWT share more than just a border on a map. Weather moves across the invisible line on the landscape, and water flows downstream from the Peace and Athasbasca Riv-

Tim Heron is the NWTMN Interim Measures Agreement (IMA) Coordinator, and also sits as the Aboriginal Steering Committee Member, on the NWT Water Stewardship Strategy. He lives in Fort Smith, NWT.

Bruce Maclean

“From the First Nation perspective, we would say that the Lower Athabasca Regional Plan [in Northern Alberta] is pretty flawed. Any protected area or any of that just fits in around exist-

Paul Jones Associate Professor, University of Saskatchewan pdj055@mail.usask.ca

Research Project

Stephane McLachlan and Andrew Miller Environmental Conservation Lab, University of Manitoba mclachla@cc.umanitoba.ca

Hello, my name is Paul Jones. I’m an Associate Professor in the School of Environment and Sustainability and the Toxicology Centre at the University of Saskatchewan.

Phase 1: Changes in environment due to upstream development (Spring 2011 – Spring 2012)

Stef McLachlan has been conducting research on environmental health and justice in partnership with Indigenous communities across western Canada. He is especially interested in how western science can better serve the needs of these communities. Andy Miller now teaches at University of Winnipeg and has a research program that links ecological science with Traditional Knowledge.

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Comparing Water Policy in AB and NWT

Bruce Maclean & Tim Heron

“The government’s own scientists are showing impacts from the level of development in the region. Yet there doesn’t appear to be a process that then looks at how that will impact treaty rights.”

Fish Sampling: Paul Jones

One River, Many Relations

Stef McLachlan grows a new set of antlers. Photo courtesy of Sloan Whiteknife (MCFN), Fort Chipewyan.

ing mining leases. The same for First Nations’ treaty rights. NWT has a government that is very pro-water. Very forward thinking in terms of managing for water quality and quantity. And I think that you’re going to see that butt heads with Alberta, who really have a mandate to develop the economic resources in the oil sands.”

The overall goal of this project is to document any impacts of the Oil Sands and other industrial development on environment and human health over the next five "Outcomes of years on the this participatory Athabasca, research Peace and are shaped and Slave Rivcontrolled ers. The throughout by all project was those communities started by that are involved." the Mikisew Cree First Nation and the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. It now also involves researchers from University of Manitoba and University of Saskatchewan and is extending to Fort Smith and Fort Resolution and beyond.

Over the past year, we have been sampling fish on the Athabasca and Slave Rivers, looking at general indicators of the health of the fish, and looking at the potential from exposure to chemical contaminants from the oil sands operations. We have been looking at five species of fish: Walleye/Pickerel, Whitefish, Jackfish/Pike,

“First Nations h a v e been advocating and trying to get off the ground a larger land use plans known as the Traditional Land and Resource Use Management Plans. And those would be based on the First Nations doing a lot more of the traditional knowledge work that needs to be done, and right now is only done when there’s a proposed project. So really they’re only focusing on areas that are then Continued on page 4

Goldeye, and Burbot/Loche Mariah. At this point, after four samplings over the past year, it doesn’t look like that there is really much impact of chemical contaminants on the fish, as a whole, up and down the river. If there were major effects we would expect to see them in all species at all sampling times. We only see effects in some species at some times. But we still think this Continued on page 2

Outcomes of this participatory research are shaped and controlled throughout by all those communities that are involved. Continued on page 2

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Students Speak Out

Deninu School students

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Paul Jones explains to community members what toxicologists like him look for as indicators of fish health. Dog Camp, Summer 2012, Fort Chipewyan. Photo courtesy of Andrew Miller.

Pine Point Mine

Llyod Norn & Tom Unka

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PADEMP Update

Stuart MacMillan

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Monitoring Pollution in Wildlife Phil Thomas


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