Date: 20131104
Docket: T-294-12
Citation:
2013 FC 1118
Ottawa, Ontario, November 4, 2013
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice
Zinn
BETWEEN:
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YELLOWKNIVES
DENE FIRST NATION
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS AND NORTHERN DEVELOPMENT,
THE MACKENZIE VALLEY LAND AND WATER BOARD,
and
ALEX DEBOGORSKI
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Respondents
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
The Yellowknives Dene First Nation [Yellowknives
Dene] seeks to set aside a decision of the Mackenzie Valley Environmental
Impact Review Board [the Review Board]. The Review Board concluded, pursuant
to paragraph 128(1)(a) of the Mackenzie Valley Resource Management Act,
SC 1998, c 25 [the Act], that the proposed Debogorski Diamond Exploration
Project [the Debogorski Project] “is not likely to have any significant adverse
impact on the environment or to be a cause of significant public concern.” As
a result, the Review Board concluded that an environmental impact review of the
Debogorski Project was not necessary and that it should proceed to the
regulatory phase for permitting and licensing.
[2]
The Yellowknives Dene submit that this is an
unreasonable decision, or alternatively was made contrary to the Act because
the Review Board failed “to ensure that the concerns of aboriginal
people and the general public are taken into account in that process” as is
required by paragraph 114(c) of Act. It is submitted that where
there is a failure by the Crown to consult and accommodate the concerns of the
First Nations, then the requirements under paragraph 114(c) of the Act have not
been met: Ka’a’Gee Tu First Nation v Canada (Minister of Indian and
Northern Affairs), 2007 FC 764 [Ka’a’Gee Tu] and Yellowknives
Dene First Nation v Canada (Attorney General), 2010 FC 1139 [Yellowknives
Dene First Nation]. The question of whether there was a failure to comply
with the Act requires a finding that the Crown’s duty to the Yellowknives Dene
was not met. If it was met, then there is no breach of the Act.
[3]
The Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern
Development [the Minister] was the only respondent that participated in the
application and only to the Yellowknives Dene’s submission that the Crown
failed to consult and accommodate on this project. Notwithstanding the focus of
that submission, some of what was offered by the Minister was also relevant to
the issue of the reasonableness of the decision under review.
[4]
After careful review of the more than 20 volumes
of the record, and consideration of the written and oral submissions of the
parties and the jurisprudence, I am unable to agree with the position of the Yellowknives
Dene. For the reasons that follow, I must dismiss this application.
GENERAL
BACKGROUND
The
Yellowknives Dene First Nation, the Land Claim Process, and Drybones Bay
[5]
The Yellowknives Dene is a band within the
meaning of the Indian Act, RSC 1985, c I-5. It is also a part of the
Akaitcho Dene First Nations [the Akaitcho Dene]. They are aboriginal peoples
within the meaning of section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, being
Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11, reprinted RSC 1985,
App II, No 44.
[6]
On July 25, 1900, the Akaitcho Dene entered into
a treaty with the Crown at Deninu K’ue (Fort Resolution) [the 1900 Treaty].
The Crown and the Akaitcho Dene have differing views of the 1900 Treaty: the
Crown regards it as an adhesion to Treaty No. 8, whereas the Akaitcho Dene
consider it to be a treaty of peace, friendship, and co-existence. Further,
the Akaitcho Dene consider the geographic scope of the 1900 Treaty to have been
determined by the exchange of oral representations and promises by the Chiefs
and the representatives of the Crown present at the treaty council. Despite
these differing views, on the 100th anniversary of the 1900 Treaty,
the Akaitcho Dene and the Crown entered into a framework agreement as a key
step in a comprehensive land claim process initiated in the 1970s. That land
claim process is ongoing.
[7]
The Minister accepts that “although a strong prima
facie claim has never been proven in court or officially accepted by Canada, it is fair to characterize the Yellowknives Dene’s claim to section 35 rights in the Drybones Bay area as reasonably arguable.”
[8]
Drybones Bay proper is a bay on the north shore of Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories, and is about
50 kms from Yellowknife. There is no consensus on the geographic boundaries of
the “Drybones Bay area” as that term is used by the parties. According to the
Review Board, “[t]hroughout the hearings of [the] environmental assessment [for
the Debogorski Project] and previous environmental assessments dealing with the
same area, the Yellowknives Dene First Nation frequently used the term
"Drybones Bay" to refer to a much larger area than the bay itself,
but also referring to a length of surrounding shoreline and points inland.”
During the environmental assessment process, legal counsel for the Yellowknives
Dene “identified the challenge of providing a detailed boundary to the area,
and explained that Elders are ‘looking at a broad perspective of a land they’ve
used for generations’.”
[9]
In its decision, the Review Board included a map
of the area, which showed “Drybones Bay proper” and a previous claim area – the
Smitski claim area – within which the Debogorski Project is to take place.
That map is annexed as Annex A to these Reasons. The small island that falls
within part of the Smitski claim area is Burnt Island. When one examines the
understanding of the Yellowknives Dene of the Drybones Bay area as shown on
Annex B (a map with English Place names, a copy of which (with Traditional
Place names) was attached as an exhibit to the affidavit of Chief Edward
Sangris, Chief of the Dettah community of the Yellowknives), one immediately
sees that the area of the Debogorski Project is a very small part of the
Drybones Bay area.
[10]
The Yellowknives Dene submit that while the area
of the Debogorski Project is only a small part of the Drybones Bay area, the
Board, when considering the impact of the project, had to consider the
cumulative cultural impacts of the projects in the Drybones Bay area which the
Yellowknives Dene characterized as constituting a “death by a thousand cuts.”
[11]
Whatever its precise boundaries, there is no
doubt that the Drybones Bay area is an area of critical significance to the
Yellowknives Dene. The Minister agrees that the Yellowknives Dene “have used
the area in and around Drybones Bay for harvesting and other cultural practices
for generations, and recognize[s] the importance of the area to the
Yellowknives Dene.” The Review Board also accepted the significance of the
area in its decision:
The Review Board
accepts that the shoreline zone [of the proposed project, in Drybones Bay] is historically important to the Aboriginal peoples who have used it for hundreds
if not thousands of years, and continue to use the area today. The
archaeological record demonstrates the importance of the area. Oral testimony
on the public record from this environmental assessment proceeding, and other
shoreline zone environmental assessments also confirms the importance of the
area. The sites include archaeological sites spanning from prehistoric times
to more recent heritage resource sites of historical relevance to Aboriginal
peoples.
[12]
The Yellowknives Dene asserted throughout the
environmental assessment process and in this application that the Drybones Bay area is a place without parallel and that “they need to preserve this
incredibly special area for [their] survival as a people, to maintain [their]
culture and way of life.” In short, the Drybones Bay area is incredibly
important to the Yellowknives Dene for many reasons.
Previous
Development in the Drybones Bay Area
[13]
The Yellowknives Dene describe the previous
development in the Drybones Bay area as follows:
In the past decade,
the Drybones Bay has come under intense and accelerating development pressure,
mainly from mineral exploration. The Debogorski project is the 7th
mineral exploration project proposed in the area in this short time. Secondary
uses like snowmobiling are increasing due to the access created by exploration
companies’ infrastructure, trails and camps, adding to the development pressure
in the area.”
They say that
“[t]he evidence on the record is clear and convincing: Drybones Bay Area is
under grave threat from development.” They note that “nearly six years ago the
Review Board found [in relation to another project]” that “cumulative cultural
impacts are at a critical threshold… [and] that without land management
planning by the Crown and Aboriginal peoples, particularly the Yellowknives
Dene, ‘this threshold will be surpassed’.” These previous mineral exploration
projects were the subject of prior Review Board decisions.
[14]
On the other hand, the Minister points out that:
To protect lands in a
proposed Akaitcho settlement area from disposition or development while
negotiations are ongoing, there has been an interim withdrawal of lands. Those
lands selected for interim withdrawal cannot be the subject of new mineral
claim registrations. The majority of the land in the larger region referred to
as the Drybones Bay area / Shoreline Zone has already been withdrawn and
therefore cannot be developed (however, the relatively small Debogorski claim
area itself, along with some other lands where there were existing third-party
interests registered, were not withdrawn).
[15]
An overview map of the withdrawn lands and a
close-up map focusing on the Drybones Bay area were attached as Exhibits to the
affidavit of Chief Edward Sangris. They are attached to these Reasons as Annex
C and Annex D, respectively. Annex D and the handwritten general indication of
the location of the Debogorski Project area shows that it is excluded from the
withdrawn land area. Nevertheless, the Minister submits that when considering
the submissions of the Yellowknives Dene, one must not loose sight of the fact
that much of the Drybones Bay area has been withdrawn from development, pending
the land claim settlement.
The Debogorski Diamond
Exploration Project and its Procedural History
[16]
On February 9, 2011, Mr. Alex Debogorski
submitted a land use permit application to the Mackenzie Valley Land and Water
Board [the Land and Water Board] to conduct a ten drill-hole diamond
exploration project in the Drybones Bay area. More specifically, the project
would take place in the Smitski #1 claim area along the shoreline of Great
Slave Lake, to the east of Drybones Bay proper.
[17]
Mr. Debogorski’s claim is mostly over water.
The proposed mineral exploration project would consist of drilling up to ten
holes over a five-year period and the support activities needed to conduct the
drilling, such as transporting equipment to and from the site, setting up
camps, drawing water from the lake, and so on. The drilling would be conducted
to a maximum depth of 300 feet and would require 10,000 gallons of water per
day, per running drill. Each drill hole is expected to take one week.
[18]
Only two drilling sites were specifically
located by Mr. Debogorski in his application. These sites are located on or
adjacent to previously-disturbed land. Although one of the drilling sites is
only 38 meters from an archaeological site, according to Prince of Wales
Northern Heritage Centre archaeologist Tom Andrews, both drill holes “will be
located in areas that most likely [have] been previously disturbed by the
Snowfield camp and access roads. In addition, previous archaeological work in
the area seems to have checked [the drill hole] areas to some extent. In [Mr.
Andrews’ opinion], impacts to unrecorded archaeological sites are unlikely in the
context of the first two drill sites.”
[19]
It was stated in the application, and noted by
the Review Board, that Mr. Debogorski intends to make decisions about the
locations of the remaining eight drill-sites, which could be on land or ice, or
both, based in part on the information generated from the first two drill holes.
[20]
On April 14, 2011, pursuant to subsection 125(1)
of the Act, the Land and Water Board referred Mr. Debogorski’s land use permit
application to the Review Board for an environmental assessment. That
provision requires such a referral where, “in its opinion, the development might
have a significant adverse impact on the environment or might be a cause of
public concern” (emphasis added). The basis for the Land and Water Board’s
referral was the “contentious history of other applications in the Drybones Bay
area; … the [Review Board’s] previous suggestion that no new land use permits
be issued for proposed developments … within Drybones Bay … until a plan has
been developed; the Review Board’s previous and most recent statement that the ‘cumulative
cultural impacts [in the Drybones Bay area are] at a critical threshold;’ …
[and the] significant public concern regarding the integrity of the cultural
and spiritual values associated with the Drybones Bay area with continued
development.”
[21]
The environmental assessment process that
eventually led to the decision under review took place over some eight months.
It included a community information session (July 20, 2011); a public hearing
(September 12-13, 2011); and a second community hearing (October 12, 2011).
The Yellowknives Dene were active throughout the process, participating in and
making submissions at the hearings, as did other First Nations and interested groups,
such as the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre.
[22]
At the public hearing, Mr. Andrews, an archaeologist
from the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre, and the Yellowknives Dene
expressed particular concern about the uncertain location of future drill sites
and the impact these may have
on undiscovered or undocumented heritage sites. It was
noted by the Review Board that at a public hearing, Todd Slack, Research and
Regulatory Specialist with the Yellowknives Dene, said:
There’s a fair amount
of project uncertainty associated with this proposal. [Yellowknives Dene] have
identified two particular areas of uncertainty: the location of the balance of
the drill holes…and the long-term camp location. Without knowing where these
drill holes are, it is very difficult to properly evaluate the impacts
associated with this program.
[23]
To prevent the unintended disruption of
archaeological sites, Mr. Andrews recommended that:
Once the locations of
the next eight drill holes have been determined, the proponent must hire an
archaeologist to conduct an archaeological impact assessment of the drill holes
and surrounding areas, access routes, and other areas of anticipated ground
disturbance.
[24]
Throughout the process, the Yellowknives Dene
strongly opposed the project until a land use plan for the Drybones Bay area is in place. However, and in the alternative, it was submitted that should the
project proceed, both it and the North Slave Métis Alliance should be involved
in Mr. Debogorski’s future drill site selection to avoid impacts to heritage
resources.
THE REVIEW
BOARD DECISION
[25]
The Review Board, as noted previously, concluded
that the proposed Debogorski Project is not likely to have any significant
adverse impact on the environment or to be a cause of significant public
concern and that an environmental impact review of it is not necessary.
[26]
The Act provides that:
128. (1) On completing an environmental
assessment of a proposal for a development, the Review Board shall,
(a) where the development is not
likely in its opinion to have any significant adverse impact on the
environment or to be a cause of significant public concern, determine that an
environmental impact review of the proposal need not be conducted;
(b) where the development is likely in
its opinion to have a significant adverse impact on the environment,
(i) order that an environmental impact
review of the proposal be conducted, subject to paragraph 130(1)(c), or
(ii) recommend that the approval of the
proposal be made subject to the imposition of such measures as it considers
necessary to prevent the significant adverse impact;
(c) where the development is likely in
its opinion to be a cause of significant public concern, order that an
environmental impact review of the proposal be conducted, subject to
paragraph 130(1)(c);
And
(d) where the development is likely in
its opinion to cause an adverse impact on the environment so significant that
it cannot be justified, recommend that the proposal be rejected without an
environmental impact review.
[emphasis added]
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128. (1) Au terme de l’évaluation
environnementale, l’Office :
a) s’il conclut que le projet n’aura
vraisemblablement pas de répercussions négatives importantes sur
l’environnement ou ne sera vraisemblablement pas la cause de préoccupations
importantes pour le public, déclare que l’étude d’impact n’est pas nécessaire;
b) s’il conclut que le projet aura
vraisemblablement des répercussions négatives importantes sur l’environnement
:
(i) soit ordonne, sous réserve de la
décision ministérielle prise au titre de l’alinéa 130(1)c), la réalisation
d’une étude d’impact,
(ii) soit recommande que le projet ne soit
approuvé que si la prise de mesures de nature, à son avis, à éviter ces
répercussions est ordonnée;
c) s’il conclut que le projet sera
vraisemblablement la cause de préoccupations importantes pour le public,
ordonne, sous réserve de la décision ministérielle prise au titre de l’alinéa
130(1)c), la réalisation d’une étude d’impact;
d) s’il conclut que le projet aura
vraisemblablement des répercussions négatives si importantes sur
l’environnement qu’il est injustifiable, en recommande le rejet, sans étude
d’impact.
[non souligné dans l'original]
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[27]
The Review Board’s decision was that the project
fell within paragraph 128(1)(a) of the Act because it was “not likely… to have
any significant adverse impact on the environment or be the cause of
significant public concern.” Accordingly, there was no need to proceed to an
environmental impact review, the more extensive process provided for under
sections 132 to 137.3 of the Act.
ANALYSIS
Standard of
Review
[28]
The Yellowknives Dene at the hearing submitted
that the question of the reasonableness of the decision under review, being a
question of mixed law and fact, is reviewable on the reasonableness standard. I
agree.
[29]
I also agree with the Yellowknives Dene that the
Supreme Court in Haida Nation v British Columbia (Minister of Forests),
2004 SCC 73 [Haida] held that questions regarding the existence and
content of the Crown’s duty to consult and accommodate are to be reviewed on
the correctness standard. However, as was pointed out in Ka’a’Gee Tu there
is a significant factual element in such determinations such that a decision
whether the Crown has met its duty in any particular case involves “assessing
the facts of the case against the content of the duty:” Ka’a’Gee Tu at
para 91.
1. Was
the Decision of the Review Board Unreasonable?
[30]
The Yellowknives Dene submit that the decision
under review “is unreasonable in substance, so much so that the conclusions bear
little rational connection to the evidence and factual findings.” They
particularize those submissions at paragraphs 92 to 102 of their memorandum
which I summarize as follows:
1.
The Review Board relies on the measures contained
in decision ES0506-005 to address the issue of the cumulative impacts in the Drybones Bay area, when it knew that those measures had not been implemented;
2.
The Review Board uses its faulty
characterization of the Debogorski Project as “small scale” and “of short
duration” and being “located in a previously disturbed area” to conclude that
“[p]ublic concern about cumulative effects are [sic] therefore not
relevant.”
3.
The Review Board decision on cumulative impacts
is contrary to the finding, some six years earlier, that the Drybones Bay area
was at a “critical threshold” and, it is submitted, this project is “the last
straw [pushing] the Drybones Bay Area beyond the tipping point;” and
4.
The Review Board failed to include any
mitigation measures in its decision.
[31]
I am unable to accept the submission of the Yellowknives
Dene that the decision was unreasonable. In my view, their fundamental dispute
with the Review Board is that they do not agree with the conclusions it reached
on the evidence before it. In the view of the Yellowknives Dene, as expressed
in the decision and elsewhere, any project within the greater Drybones Bay area ought not to be approved because the area is at risk; any further
development is the “straw that breaks the camel’s back.” The Review Board, on
the other hand, as it is required to do, carefully examined the detail of the
proposed project, the risks and sensitivities of the area, and reached a contrary
conclusion.
[32]
The issues raised in this application relating
to its previous suggestion that no new land use permits be issued for proposed
developments within the Drybones Bay area until a plan has been developed, and
its previous statement that the “cumulative cultural impacts are at a critical
threshold” in the area were front and center before the Review Board. Indeed,
it notes that these were two of the reasons given by the Land and Water Board
for referring the land use permit application for the Debogorski Project to
environmental assessment.
[33]
The Review Board further notes, when describing
the scope of its assessment, the very issues the Yellowknives Dene now focus on:
The scope of the
environmental assessment focused on the following key issues:
•
social and cultural issues:
o
project specific impacts to heritage and burial
grounds;
o
cumulative impacts on traditional land use and
culture; and
•
public concern about unimplemented mitigation
measures and outstanding issues from previous environmental assessments
conducted for proposed projects in the shoreline zone of Drybones Bay.
Impact to Known
and Unknown Archaeological Resources
[34]
With respect to project specific impacts to
heritage and burial grounds, the Review Board reasonably relied on the evidence
of the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre that there were five
archaeological sites within the claim block. These consisted of “tent rings,
hide drying racks, and birch bark or toboggan presses.” The expert from the
Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre testified that only one of the five
archaeological sites was in “close proximity” to the two proposed drill holes.
It was 38 metres away. He offered his recommendation that drilling must be a
minimum of 30 metres from “all known archaeological sites” and further opined
that “impacts to unrecorded archaeological sites are unlikely in the context of
the first two drill sites.” In short, his evidence supports the conclusion
reached by the Review Board that the first two drill holes would have little or
no impact to heritage and burial grounds.
[35]
The Review Board considered the concern raised
by the Yellowknives Dene that as yet undiscovered or undocumented heritage
resources could be impacted by the project’s eight remaining unidentified drill
holes. It noted that the development area, with limited exceptions, is
“predominately water” and that if subsequent drill holes are located off shore
on ice during the winter, “it is unlikely that those sites would cause impacts
to archaeological resources.” Further, it found that any impact such drilling
would have on traditional travel routes over the ice “would be of short
duration, without lasting impacts.”
[36]
The Review Board also considered the possibility
that some of the remaining drill holes might be on Burnt Island. It noted that
a report in 2004 “identified no sites on the island within the claim.” The
report did identify one site that bordered on the claim and recommended that
the “island should be more thoroughly surveyed to find any other structures and
evidence of previous occupation.” As a consequence, the Review Board made the
following suggestion:
For any activities planned by the
developer on Burnt Island, the Mackenzie Valley Land and Water Board should
require the developer to conduct further archaeological survey work on the
development footprint of any planned drill sites or accesses roads, if the Prince
of Wales Northern Heritage Centre can provide sufficient justification to the
Mackenzie Valley Land and Water Board for its need.
[37]
One of the complaints of the Yellowknives Dene
is that the Review Board only made suggestions when mandatory orders would have
been more appropriate. Given that the preliminary assessment of Burnt Island located no archaeological sites within the claim area, it was not unreasonable, in
my view, that the Review Board addressed the Burnt Island concerns as a
suggestion. It reasonably put the burden on the Prince of Wales Northern
Heritage Centre to provide “sufficient justification” to the Mackenzie Valley Land and Water Board for the need for further archaeological survey work by
the developer around the proposed drill sites.
[38]
Lastly, the Review Board turned to the
possibility that future drill holes might be located on land on “the small
portion of the developer’s claim block that includes the shoreline.” It noted
that the shoreline area of the developer’s claim was “already significantly
disturbed” by previous exploration. Accordingly, it reasonably found that “it
is unlikely that unidentified archaeological resources exist within most of the
developer’s claim block, and if they do, the standard terms and conditions included
in a land use permit will prevent any significant adverse impacts to them.”
[39]
The Review Board is entitled to considerable
deference from this Court in making decisions fully within its mandated
expertise. The Supreme Court in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir]
instructs reviewing courts that “reasonableness is
concerned mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process [and] it is also concerned
with whether the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
[40]
In this case, the Review Board provided
justification for its decision. Its decision and the reasons it provides with
respect to the two located and eight not-as-yet located drill-holes are
transparent and intelligible. Accordingly, given the unique characteristics of
the Debogorski Project, it was not unreasonable for the Review Board to find
that there was unlikely to be a significant adverse impact on the environment
or a cause of significant public concern as a consequence of eight of the
possible future drill holes not yet being identified by the developer.
Cumulative
Impact
[41]
The Yellowknives Dene point to previous
decisions of the Review Board in which it suggested that no more land use
permits should be issued until a plan for the area had been developed. In the
Snowfield Development Corporation’s Diamond Exploration Program decision, dated
February 25, 2004 (EA-03-006), and the North American General Resources
Corporation Preliminary Diamond Exploration in Wool Bay, dated February 10,
2004 (EA-03-003), the Review Board suggested that:
No new land use permits should be
issued for new developments within the Shoreline Zone, and within Drybones Bay and Wool Bay proper, until a plan has been developed to identify the vision,
objectives, and management goals based on the resource and cultural values for
the area. This plan should be drafted and implemented with substantive input
from Aboriginal parties. The plan should specifically address future
development direction and include provisions for protecting sensitive
environmental, cultural, and spiritual sites. This exercise should be
completed within 5 years and provide clear management prescriptions for greater
certainty of all parties in the future development of this region.
[42]
In the Consolidated Goldwin Ventures Inc.
Mineral Exploration Program decision, dated November 30, 2007 (EA0506-005), as
amended by subsequent decision, dated November 16, 2011, the Review Board included
in its decision the following measure:
To mitigate the identified significant
cumulative cultural impacts, the Government of Canada, with AANDC as the lead
department, will work with the YKDFN and other Aboriginal land users of the
subject area to produce a plan for the Shoreline Zone. This will be a
collaborative stakeholder-driven planning process similar in nature to a
regional Plan of Action, but focused on a smaller area. This plan, at a
minimum, will be drafted and implemented with substantive input from Aboriginal
parties familiar with the area, including input on cultural values and sites.
The plan will provide clear recommendations for managing development and
recreational activity in the Shoreline Zone.
The Mackenzie Valley Land and Water
Board will consider the results of this plan and its implementation before
reaching any determinations regarding preliminary screenings of new
applications for developments in the Shoreline Zone.
Until this plan is implemented, AANDC
will offer appropriate relief to mineral claim and lease holders in the Drybones Bay area from fulfilling the requirements of the NWT and Nunavut Mining
Regulations. (emphasis added)
[43]
The Review Board referenced this decision in the
decision under review and found that if its measures were approved and
implemented they “will address the issue of cumulative impacts in the Drybones Bay area.” The Yellowknives Dene submit that because the measures have not been
approved and implemented, “it is not logically possible for the measures … to
address the impacts of the Debogorski project because those measures do not yet
exist in the real world.”
[44]
This measure has not yet been approved and
implemented. However, it appears that this plan will not apply to the
Debogorski Project as it is not a “new application for development” because it
was filed on February 9, 2011, before this amended measure was
issued by the Review Board.
[45]
One must question the value of the Review Board
reiterating a measure it has previously proposed that would not have
application to the Debogorski Project. In any event, the Review Board, in
addressing the issue of the cumulative impact, does not restrict its
consideration to its earlier recommendation in EA0506-005. The Review Board in
the decision under review goes on and describes the project as “a small
exploration project, on a claim which [is] approximately 90% water” and it
forms the opinion that any disturbance to travel routes during the winter would
be of short duration and would not create significant impacts. Further, it
finds that any disturbance of the shoreline would be on an already disturbed
area and that the “proposed development will not add to this disturbance in any
significant way,” and that any disturbance on Burnt Island would be of short
duration. The Review Board concludes, based on these considerations that the
project, if it contributes at all to the cumulative impact in the area, will only
do so minimally:
Considering the evidence set out
above, and noting the anomalous nature of the small scale of the project, and
its location within an area where the land is previously disturbed, and
well-used, and the predominance of water within the developer’s claim, the
Review Board concludes that the proposed project is not likely to
significantly contribute to the previously identified cumulative adverse
impacts on land use and culture. [emphasis added]
[46]
In my view, the Review Board’s decision respecting cumulative impact is
reasonable and falls within the description given in Dunsmuir.
[47]
Although not mentioned by the Review Board, it is also relevant that its
record discloses that a very significant portion of the Drybones Bay area and the Shoreline area were withdrawn from new development after the Review Board’s
decision in EA0506-005. This withdrawal appears to have
largely implemented the suggestions in EA-03-006 and EA-03-003 over much of the
area.
[48]
Accordingly, in assessing whether there is any
cumulative impact on the larger Drybones Bay area, as alleged by the Yellowknives
Dene, one must consider not only the detail of the project under consideration
but also more limited area now subject to possible future development.
2. Was There a
Failure to Consult and Accommodate?
[49]
In an email dated July 26, 2011, the Yellowknives
Dene, with reference to the Debogorski Project and the Drybones Bay area,
informed the Crown that it was looking “forward to future discussions with the
Crown on developing an engagement plan and meaningful accommodations to the
continuing infringements in this area.”
[50]
The Crown responded that it was relying on the
Land and Water Board and the Review Board processes established by the Act, to
fulfill the Crown’s duty to consult:
Aboriginal Affairs
and Northern Development Canada (AANDC) is of the view that where a reasonable
and consultative process already exists, such as that provided for in the
Mackenzie Valley Resource Management Act (MVRMA) – i.e. the Mackenzie Valley
Environmental Impact Review Board (MVEIRB) and the accompanying regulatory
processes – the Crown may take such consultation into account and rely on these
processes to fulfill its duty to consult where appropriate.
…
Therefore, AANDC
urges the [Yellowknives First Nation] to avail itself of the consultative
processes provided through this MVRMA-mandated [environmental assessment],
especially if you anticipate specific concerns about the proposed Debogorski
project that have not been raised in previous [environmental assessments] in
this area.
[51]
As noted earlier, the Yellowknives Dene actively
participated in the processes mandated by the Act.
[52]
The Yellowknives Dene submit that the Crown has
failed to meet its duty to consult and accommodate them. They summarize this
submission in their Memorandum, as follows:
The Crown has failed
to meet its duty to consult and accommodate in this case. The Crown relied
entirely on a statutory scheme that cannot meaningfully address the First
Nation’s concerns about cumulative cultural impacts. Addressing these concerns
requires, at a minimum, some form of landscape-level land use planning for the
Drybones Bay Area. Since the Crown has refused to engage in such planning,
despite clear urging over a decade from both the first Nation and the Review
Board, and has taken no other steps to address the issues, it stands in clear
breach of its constitutional duty.
[53]
“The government’s duty to consult with
Aboriginal peoples and accommodate their interests is grounded in the honour of
the Crown,” which is “always at stake in its dealings with Aboriginal peoples:”
Haida at para 16. The “duty arises when the Crown has knowledge, real
or constructive, of the potential existence of the Aboriginal right or title
and contemplates conduct that might adversely affect it:” Haida at para
35.
[54]
The Minister does not dispute that the duty to
consult arose “in respect of the issuance of the Debogorski land use permit,
including during the [environmental assessment] process before the Review
Board.”
[55]
Haida at
paragraphs 43 and 44 confirmed that the content of the duty to consult and
accommodate varies with the circumstances:
… At one end of the
spectrum lie cases where the claim to title is weak, the Aboriginal right
limited, or the potential for infringement minor. In such cases, the only duty
on the Crown may be to give notice, disclose information, and discuss any
issues raised in response to the notice. “‘[C]onsultation’ in its least
technical definition is talking together for mutual understanding”: T. Isaac
and A. Knox, “The Crown’s Duty to Consult Aboriginal People” (2003), 41 Alta.
L. Rev. 49, at p. 61.
At the other end of
the spectrum lie cases where a strong prima facie case for the claim is
established, the right and potential infringement is of high significance to
the Aboriginal peoples, and the risk of non-compensable damage is high. In
such cases deep consultation, aimed at finding a satisfactory interim solution,
may be required. While precise requirements will vary with the circumstances,
the consultation required at this stage may entail the opportunity to make
submissions for consideration, formal participation in the decision-making
process, and provision of written reasons to show that Aboriginal concerns were
considered and to reveal the impact they had on the decision. This list is
neither exhaustive, nor mandatory for every case. The government may wish to
adopt dispute resolution procedures like mediation or administrative regimes
with impartial decision-makers in complex or difficult cases.
[56]
The Yellowknives Dene submit that in this case
the scope of the Crown’s duty is at the high end of the spectrum, requiring
"deep" consultation and accommodation because its interest in the
Drybones Bay area is clearly strong and the cumulative impacts of the
development projects is high. It is clear to the Court from the record and the
submissions that the Yellowknives Dene are saying, in large part, that the
Crown’s duty of consultation and accommodation in this case required the good
faith negotiation of a land use plan for the Drybones Bay area.
[57]
The Crown submits that only mid-range consultation is required, as the Yellowknives
Dene have only a reasonably arguable claim to the Drybones Bay area, the
seriousness of any potential impact is relatively low, as the project is small
in scope over previously disturbed sites and over water, and any contribution
to cumulative impacts in the area would be negligible, given the scope and
location of the claim. As a mid-range claim, more than notice and information
sharing is required, but there is no need for “deep” consultation. The Crown
specifically opposes a land use plan, calling it discretionary public policy
response, and notes that such a response may delay development for years.
[58]
The Crown submits, as stated earlier, that the duty is discharged in this
case by the administrative procedures and hearings provided for in the Act. I
agree with the Crown that the claim to title in this area is reasonably
arguable; however, I accept that the claim of the Yellowknives Dene to the
exercise of rights in this area is strong. Nonetheless, the potential for
adverse impact from the Debogorski Project was reasonably found by the Review
Board to be quite low – in fact, almost negligible. Both factors must be
considered when placing the duty along the spectrum: Rio
Tinto Alcan Inc. v Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, 2010
SCC 43 at para 36; Haida at paras 43-45; Taku
River Tlingit First Nation v British Columbia (Project Assessment Director), 2004 SCC 74 at para 32.
[59]
I conclude the duty to consult in this case is on the mid-range of the
spectrum because of the low adverse impact of the project. The adverse impact
is low because the two known drilling locations are on previously disturbed
sites, the location of the small camp site is known, it is a two to three man operation,
it is estimated that drilling will take at most one week per hole (or ten weeks
in total), spread out over winter and summer, depending on initial drilling
results, and drilling in undisclosed locations will either be over water, with minimal
disruption to travel routes, or on land where no known archaeological sites
have yet been located. Further, there is no proposal to cut any exploration
lines or disturb anything not already disturbed: transportation suggested was
float plane (with a dock near the proposed drill sites), snow machine and ice
road.
[60]
The question that requires addressing next is whether, at that point in
the spectrum of consultation, the processes in place under the Act satisfied
the Crown’s duty to consult in this case.
[61]
The Review Board in this case was entrusted with the duty to consult,
arising from subsection 117(2), and the definition for “impact on the
environment” in subsection 111(1) of the Act:
117.(2) Every environmental assessment
and environmental impact review of a proposal for a development shall include
a consideration of
(a) the impact of the development on the
environment, including the impact of malfunctions or accidents that may occur
in connection with the development and any cumulative impact that is likely
to result from the development in combination with other developments;
(b) the significance of any such impact;
(c) any comments submitted by members of
the public in accordance with the regulations or the rules of practice and
procedure of the Review Board;
(d) where the development is likely to
have a significant adverse impact on the environment, the need for mitigative
or remedial measures; and
(e) any other matter, such as the need
for the development and any available alternatives to it, that the Review
Board or any responsible minister, after consulting the Review Board,
determines to be relevant.
111. (1) The following definitions apply
in this Part.
…
“impact on the environment” means any
effect on land, water, air or any other component of the environment, as well
as on wildlife harvesting, and includes any effect on the social and cultural
environment or on heritage resources.
|
117. (2) (2) L’évaluation environnementale
et l’étude d’impact portent notamment sur les éléments suivants :
a) les répercussions du projet de
développement en cause sur l’environnement, y compris celles causées par les
accidents ou défaillances pouvant en découler et les répercussions
cumulatives que sa réalisation, combinée à celle d’autres projets, entraînera
vraisemblablement;
b) l’importance de ces répercussions;
c) les observations présentées par le public
en conformité avec les règlements ou les règles de pratique de l’Office;
d) dans les cas où le projet de
développement aura vraisemblablement des répercussions négatives importantes
sur l’environnement, la nécessité de prendre des mesures correctives ou
d’atténuation;
e) tout autre élément — y compris l’utilité
du projet et les solutions de rechange — que l’Office ou, après consultation
de celui-ci, tout ministre compétent estime pertinent.
111. (1) Les définitions qui suivent
s’appliquent à la présente partie..
« répercussions sur l’environnement » Les
répercussions sur le sol, l’eau et l’air et toute autre composante de
l’environnement, ainsi que sur l’exploitation des ressources fauniques. Y
sont assimilées les répercussions sur l’environnement social et culturel et
sur les ressources patrimoniales.
|
[62]
What the Yellowknives Dene would like is for the Crown to consult with
them about a plan for the Drybones Bay area, as has been previously recommended
by the Review Board. The Yellowknives Dene submit that there is a residual
duty on the Crown, over and above any duty to consult that may have been
discharged by the Review Board.
[63]
The focus of consultation is the specific proposal in issue: To drill 10
exploratory holes in previously disturbed ground, or in areas where there is
unlikely any archeological or historic site. Cumulative impacts were expressly
considered by the Review Board, and it was determined this particular
exploration operation would not cause any adverse effects that would affect the
exercise of rights or title while negotiations were underway between the Yellowknives
Dene and the Crown.
[64]
In the face of the Review Board’s reasonable finding that the project is
not likely to have any significant adverse impact (a finding based on the
evidence specific to the Debogorski Project as well as cumulative impacts), I
find that the Review Board adequately discharged the duty to consult with regard
to this particular issue and there is no residual duty on the Crown currently
to consult further with the Yellowknives Dene. However, this is not to say
that there will never be a residual duty on the Crown to consult in the future.
[65]
If resources are discovered in the claim area, or if the claim is sold as
Mr. Debogorski proposes to do if resources are found, a new duty to consult may
arise. The circumstances then may render the Review Board’s prior consultation
through this process inadequate. Further, a resource discovery may lead to a
mine in this sensitive and culturally important area—a potential adverse impact
warranting a higher level of consultation and accommodation. Those are some of
the situations where a residual duty may arise, and where the duty to
accommodate will be higher. But this does not mean a land use plan will
necessarily be appropriate.
[66]
The Board expressly considered this possibility:
The Review Board acknowledges the
Yellowknives Dene First Nation’s concerns that a mine in the heart of the Drybones Bay area would cause serious cultural impacts. However, in the event that this
small exploration project leads to additional development, there will be a
subsequent opportunity to review any larger projects that are proposed.
[67]
For these reasons, I find that the consultation process provided under
the Act adequately met the Crown’s duty to consult and accommodate in this
case. The concerns of the Yellowknives Dene were taken into account by the
Review Board, which made a decision on a very small scale project within a
sensitive area.
COSTS
[68]
Both parties sought costs at the higher end of
the Tariff if successful because of the complexity, novelty, and importance of
the issues raised. I agree that a higher scale is appropriate.
[69]
The Crown seeks costs of $18,920 against the Yellowknives
Dene pursuant to Column V of Tariff B. Having reviewed the Crown’s calculation
of those costs, I find that this is a reasonable amount and in the exercise of
my discretion will award it because of the complexity of the issues raised, the
volume of materials that were required to be reviewed, and the one specific but
very important issue the Crown addressed in the application.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
The application is dismissed; and
2.
Costs are awarded to The Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern
Development against the Yellowknives Dene First Nation in the amount of $18,920.
"Russel W. Zinn"
ANNEX “A”
ANNEX “B”
ANNEX “C”
ANNEX “D”