It highlights that not all Aboriginal communities have access to federal funds, naming Métis and Innu communities suffering from poor water quality. The report also highlights challenges in the data on Aboriginal peoples' access to safe drinking water and water and sewage systems, including issues with the definition of 'community water …show more content…
The lack of access to clean water in First Nations communities is nothing less of a human rights violation and a warning sign of the lack of environmental justice. Evidently, environmental racism found in the marginalized communities is a due to continuous lack of action from the government, at both the provincial and federal level. This type of negligence and ignorance towards indigenous people causes health impacts as well as loss of culture amongst the community. To sum up, the lack of water rights for British Columbia’s First Nations communities elevates not only human rights issue but more importantly issue that has consequences towards culture and