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Federal Government Fulfills Promise to Introduce UNDRIP Legislation

December 04, 2020

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Written By Sharon Singh, Radha Curpen, Brad Gilmour and Sean Assie

On December 3, 2020, Minister David Lametti, the federal Minister of Justice, introduced Bill C-15, An Act respecting the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Bill follows on the Liberal Party of Canada's commitment to table legislation to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) within the first year of a new mandate.

The Bill—a mere seven sections—is based on Private Member's Bill C-262, which passed in the House of Commons but died on the Order Paper in the Senate in June 2019. In summary, the Bill would require the federal government, in consultation and cooperation with Indigenous peoples, to:

This update:

As with Bill C-262, the Bill leaves many unanswered questions; its introduction has significant implications. The federal government has also launched a new website on the Bill.

UNDRIP: A Brief Overview

UNDRIP consists of 46 articles that declare standards for the rights of Indigenous peoples around the world. UNDRIP was adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in September 2007. UNDRIP underlines Indigenous rights to protect their culture, identity, religion, language, health, education and community.

UNDRIP is a declaration, not a treaty or a convention.

The text of UNDRIP explains that it was proclaimed as "a standard of achievement to be pursued in a spirit of partnership and mutual respect". Accordingly, “implementing” UNDRIP requires extensive interpretation to determine how UNDRIP may be reflected in the laws that touch on the many subjects areas covered in UNDRIP and may change the course of government policy in those areas.

See our previous blog on UNDRIP, British Columbia's UNDRIP Legislation—A Framework to Advance Reconciliation.

The Bill

The Bill builds upon Bill C-262's preamble with subtle and important inclusions, such as:

In addition to the lengthy preamble, the Bill also:

Unlike Bill C-262, the Bill stipulates what measures the action plan must include, namely measures:

The Bill requires preparation of the action plan to be completed as soon as practicable, but no later than three years after the day on which this section comes into force.

Similar to Bill C-262, the Bill does not elaborate on what implementation measures will look like and whether the government plans on implementing all aspects of UNDRIP, and does not clarify some of the ambiguous language contained in Bill C-262, including Article 2(3) of the Bill which states that nothing in the Bill is to be construed as delaying UNDRIP's application in Canadian law.

The annual report will be permanently referred to the committee of each House of Parliament that is designated or established to review matters relating to Indigenous peoples. After the report is tabled, the Minister must make it public.

The Bill and the DRIPA

The DRIPA contains some similar features to the Bill. For example, the DRIPA requires:

The chart below summarizes these differences:

Bill: the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act
(Federal)

Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act
(British Columbia)

Contains a purpose clause
Consistency between all laws of the jurisdiction and UNDRIP
Creation of an action plan
Preparation and filing of the action plan in parliament/legislature
Measures the action plan must contain
Report to the legislature on the implementation of the action plan
Clause enabling the government to enter into decision-making agreements with Indigenous Governing Bodies

 

The Federal Government's Communication Materials

Similar to British Columbia, the federal government has released communications materials including questions and answers.

In regards to:

The website communications materials are not legally binding. Whilst they answer to some degree, questions raised during consultations with the federal government, they raise many more. 

Next Steps

For the Bill to become law, it must progress from the first reading to second reading, committee stage, report stage, third reading, consideration and passage by the Senate and finally Royal Assent. Changes to the Bill may occur during these stages, although we anticipate that such changes will not be substantial.

Implications

The Bill is meant to be enabling legislation but imposes important obligations on the federal government and clarifies UNDRIP's application under Canadian law. It will require the government to take further actions, including introducing new legislation or amending current legislation, to ensure that the laws of Canada are consistent with UNDRIP. In British Columbia, the government has described a similar legislative initiative as a generational exercise.

Despite the communication materials, there is insufficient information from the government regarding:

The uncertainty on important aspects of the Bill and the government's intentions may hinder, rather than guide and assist engagement with Indigenous peoples, for example for infrastructure or resource projects. It may also deflect the issues to a later date—or to the courts. The discussion and debate in the parliamentary process that will follow may help to fill in the necessary context.

Bennett Jones will continue to monitor the Bill, the ongoing consultations, and the process of Parliamentary review. Please contact members of our Aboriginal Law or ESG groups if you have questions.

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