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A new law aims to crack down on environmental racism in Canada

A new law aims to crack down on environmental racism in Canada

CBC
Friday, June 21, 2024 09:37:23 AM UTC

For years, researchers, activists, community leaders have shown how Indigenous, Black and other racialized groups have been disproportionately affected by polluting industries.

Now, a new law will require the federal government to better track this injustice, and aim to correct it.

Bill C-226, sponsored by Green leader Elizabeth May, became law Thursday evening, nearly four years after similar legislation was first proposed in Parliament. The law will require the federal government to develop a national strategy on environmental racism within two years. 

"There is no doubt that Canada has had a problem with environmental racism for decades, and taking action is now required," May told a news conference earlier this week.

Advocates have been pressing for years for legislation to counter environmental racism, in which polluting factories and other environmentally damaging activities are disproportionately located near Indigenous or racialized communities.

As outlined in the legislation, the national strategy must include "an examination of the link between race, socio-economic status and environmental risk" and steps that can be taken to address environmental racism. 

Those could include changes to federal laws, policies and programs.

"It's been a long road," said Ingrid Waldron, a professor in the global peace and social justice program at McMaster University, who has been pushing for such a law.

Waldron is one of the founders of the Canadian Coalition for Environmental and Climate Justice, and the author of There's Something in the Water, which documents the health impacts of environmental hazards on Black and Indigenous communities in Nova Scotia and beyond, and the actions those groups have taken to fight back against the pollution poisoning their communities.

The legislation, she said, means two things happen: "you get to hold government's feet to the fire" and, secondly, "it creates much more transparency now there's much more pressure for them to do something."

Advocates often point to the experience of Asubpeeschoseewagong Netum Anishinabek First Nation, known as Grassy Narrows, in Ontario as one of the most glaring examples of environmental racism, and the disproportionate impacts on racialized communities. 

Residents in the community have for decades suffered health impacts from mercury contamination produced by a former pulp and paper mill. 

The First Nation filed a lawsuit in Ontario Superior Court earlier this month, arguing governments have failed to protect against or remedy the effects of mercury contamination in the English-Wabigoon River system.

Judy Da Silva, a Grassy Narrows grandmother and the community's environmental health co-ordinator, compared her community's experience with that of Walkerton, a small town in southern Ontario, where seven people died and more than 2,000 others became ill from E. coli contamination in May 2000. An inquiry was ordered the same month as the outbreak and residents were offered compensation the following year.

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