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Does Nature Belong in Canada's Charter?

Posted: 01/16/2013 8:12 am

Public health worker Beatriz Mendoza was living near the Riachuelo River in Buenos Aires, Argentina, when she started losing feeling in her fingers and toes. Her neighbours were also experiencing health issues -- including skin rashes, cancers and birth defects -- clearly linked to pollution in the heavily industrialized area. The Matanza-Riachuelo basin is one of the most contaminated waterways in Latin America.

In 2004, Mendoza and other residents sued the national, provincial and municipal governments and 44 corporations. And they won. Environmental lawyer David R. Boyd describes the case in his book, The Right to a Healthy Environment: Revitalizing Canada's Constitution. He writes that the lawsuit led Argentina's government to establish a new river basin authority and put in place clean-up, restoration and regional environmental health plans.

The government has since increased the number of environmental inspectors in the region from three to 250, and created 139 sampling points for monitoring water, air and soil quality. Three new water treatment plants have been built, providing clean water to millions of people; 11 sewage-treatment plants have been built or expanded, also serving millions; 169 garbage dumps have been closed; and 484 polluting industrial facilities have been shut down.

As Boyd points out, this was possible because Argentina's constitution recognizes "the right to a healthy environment and the citizens' power to defend their rights through the judicial system." It's a right that people in more than 100 countries worldwide enjoy. Canadians are not among them.

Our Charter of Rights and Freedoms gives us freedom of expression, equal protection from discrimination and the right to life, liberty and security of the person. But one fundamental right is notably absent -- to live in an environment conducive to health and well-being, with clean air, water and soil and biological diversity. As Boyd writes, "In a country where Nature is an integral element of our national identity, and in an era where scientific evidence establishes our basic dependence on a healthy environment, it is striking that our constitution makes no reference to it."

Along with David Boyd and Ecojustice, the David Suzuki Foundation is working to change that. Boyd's book helped launch the initiative, and the Foundation is hosting a telephone town hall with him on Sunday, February 3, from 4 to 5 p.m. Pacific Time (7 to 8 Eastern). It's free, but space is limited. You can register until January 27 at www.davidsuzuki.org.

Boyd makes a convincing case for the necessity of such constitutional protection. He points to evidence from more than 100 nations demonstrating that, "constitutional entrenchment of environmental rights and responsibilities contributes to stronger laws, increased enforcement, an enhanced role for citizens, and improved environmental performance."

Although the idea of a constitutional right to a healthy environment is gaining support, it does have its detractors, including some government and industry insiders in Canada. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers argues such a law would harm our economy, and some government representatives claim it would hinder tar sands and other industrial development. Boyd doesn't buy it. He notes that constitutional rights must be balanced against competing rights. For example, free speech comes with restrictions against pornography, hate literature, false advertising and so on.

Evidence from countries with environmental rights, such as Norway, also shows the shakiness of the economic argument. "Rather than trumping economic activity," Boyd writes, "the right to a healthy environment would compel, or at least increase the likelihood of, sustainable development."

And, even though there is still much to be done in Argentina's Matanza-Riachuelo River Basin, people there are already enjoying significantly improved living conditions, including a stronger local economy.

Getting the right to a healthy environment enshrined in Canada's Constitution won't be easy. We're headed in the opposite direction, with environmental protections and laws being rolled back or gutted, mostly in the name of keeping us tied to a resource-extraction economy. And despite our country's abundant water, many people, especially in First Nations communities, don't have access to clean drinking water.

It's time to address Canada's dismal and worsening environmental record. If all of us -- "Canadians of all ages, all backgrounds, all provinces and territories, and all political persuasions" -- work together, we can make it happen.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington.

Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

 
 
 

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Public health worker Beatriz Mendoza was living near the Riachuelo River in Buenos Aires, Argentina, when she started losing feeling in her fingers and toes. Her neighbours were also experiencing heal...
Public health worker Beatriz Mendoza was living near the Riachuelo River in Buenos Aires, Argentina, when she started losing feeling in her fingers and toes. Her neighbours were also experiencing heal...
 
 
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09:24 AM on 01/17/2013
If you listen to Jeff Rubins you might see things the way David Suzuki does. Who is Jeff? Well, he was the chief economist for CIBC World Markets. He had to quit his job to publish his ideas that he felt so strongly about. Namely that the era of economic growth is ending. For good. And I mean that in more ways than one. Expensive energy is the root cause. Stimulus spending to kick start a sluggish economy, and growing deficits even more will only make it harder for us to take our medicine. We need to figure out how to thrive in a steady-state or even declining economy. Paramount to our success will, of course, be a healthy, resilient environment that provides the key services to us that are simply not replaceable. We are going to have to consider earning less, sharing jobs, consuming much less, living in smaller homes, rebuilding local economies. This is the first year of The International Day of Happiness on March 20. It's time we thought about what really gives us well-being. Studies show, it ain't more stuff and more dough!
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PiperSniper
09:18 AM on 01/17/2013
Well, the government has already gone backwards by "releasing" thousands of previously protected lakes, streams & creeks. Now, there are only a handful listed as "protected". In a country that has the most fresh water in the world, that is disgraceful and embarrassing. Sustainability and respect are not priorities of the current provincial and federal governments.
08:25 AM on 01/17/2013
Environmental clauses in the Constitution?!

Liberal judges would have a field day, probably reducing our economic activity to such a degree, we'd be asking Haiti for foreign aid.
09:10 AM on 01/17/2013
What about being economically viable and protecting the environment as well. To far fetched?
11:20 PM on 01/16/2013
With Stephen Harper as Prime Minister, I think that is highly unlikely.
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jarnakak
fava beans and sweet breads are for sissies
11:36 AM on 01/16/2013
i watched your show the other day, andean adventure, and it gave me a healthy dose of food for thought. though i take chomsky with a grain of salt, your findings give a more credible view and a much broader context of what central and south american experience can teach us, the old, jaded, information-starved northerners. though i don't always agree, i think your thoughts and views are invaluable to the discourse in canada and around the world.
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Robert C Lawson
justice & human rights for all
10:11 AM on 01/16/2013
Well, Indeed Canada has a human rights constitution, but it is rarely if ever enforced,..which begs the question;"what use are "rights" if they are mere words on paper"?..and environmentaly? we have the very same situation,, The few valid "protections" we do have? have been so watered down and tampered with by vested interests and "lobbyists" etc, that they are and have, no effects at all,, much like our so vaunted "human rights" record,Somehow,somewhere? along the way, Our! Canada has lost its way,..We are stumbling blindly into the abbyss whilst hoping for the best, but not expecting it to happen,Do not mistake, I love my country, but we have lost that which makes us Canadians,Our lands,waters,people,,are now subservient to the almighty[and so often corrupt] $$,..money is all very well,, usefull even,at times,,but it is a mere tool,MORE! We want more!!"please sir! we want some more"[Dickens],..is that so much to ask??.. is it??.. anyone?..
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