Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday reannounced the new Canada Water Agency, which will protect the country’s freshwater supply and be headquartered in Winnipeg.
“This province is home to over 100,000 lakes and rivers, with water flowing in from the Rockies and the [United] States, all the way out to Hudson Bay,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday, overlooking the convergence point of two of those rivers — the Assiniboine and Red — at The Forks in Winnipeg.
“It only makes sense that it’s [the new agency] here.”
But he had no answer when asked where in the city it will be located or when it will be up and running.
“We are working with the municipality on physical infrastructure and location,” Trudeau said.
He then spoke about climate change and attacked the Conservatives, under then-leader Stephen Harper, for cancelling the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration, which had been in place to help farmers during times of drought.
A news release accompanying Trudeau’s announcement said the federal government will spend $85.1 million over five years on the water agency, then $21 million ongoing thereafter.
The agency will work with provinces, territories, Indigenous Peoples, local authorities, scientists and other partners to find the best ways to keep Canada’s fresh water safe, clean and well-managed for everyone, the release said.
“This is the planet that young people will be inheriting and it’s up to all of us to protect it,” Trudeau said.
The creation of the independent departmental agency was first mentioned in the 2023 federal budget in March.
It’s not known how many employees will be based at the Winnipeg headquarters.
Mayor Scott Gillingham said the agency will serve as an economic engine and create hundreds of jobs but offered no other specifics.
He doesn’t know where the agency will be located but hopes it will be downtown.
“The agency will share the latest freshwater science, to serve as a major data hub and to fund watershed initiatives through the federal government’s renewed Freshwater Action Plan,” said Winnipeg MP Terry Duguid, parliamentary secretary to the minister of environment and climate change.
Manitoba is “a province that experiences every conceivable water challenge that we face in Canada,” so it’s appropriate the agency is located in Winnipeg, he said.
The province is also built on hydroelectricity, Gillingham said.
“The reason this city exists is because of the forks of the two rivers located right behind me,” he said.
The Canada Water Agency will now be part of this legacy, he said.
One of the first priorities of the agency is to modernize the Canada Water Act, Trudeau said.
“The threats and realities facing our environment have changed since it was written in 1970. Updating this act is about ensuring we have the tools to work with the provinces and territories on protecting and restoring shared waters.”
As stewards of these lands and waters for millennia, consultation and co-operation with Indigenous Peoples will be critical, the release said.
Trudeau said the agency will also focus on addressing all remaining long-term drinking water advisories, an issue on many First Nations.
Prior to his announcement, Trudeau walked with local high school students as they were all given a guided tour of native plants at The Forks.
He is also scheduled to take part in a town hall in the evening during his stop in Winnipeg, and intends to make appearances in the two Manitoba ridings — Portage-Lisgar and Winnipeg South Centre — where byelections are to take place on June 19.
The visit comes a day after a special rapporteur said a formal inquiry into foreign interference in Canada’s elections isn’t needed. Former governor general David Johnston said he plans instead to hold his own public hearings about the issue later this year.
Trudeau had asked Johnston in March to investigate the extent and impact of foreign interference in Canada, amid allegations China meddled in the last two federal elections.
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