Fight against toxic mining runoff from Canada persists, say U.S. Indigenous leaders
WASHINGTON — U.S. Indigenous leaders say they aren’t about to stop pushing Canada to agree to a bilateral investigation into toxic mining runoff from British Columbia.
Representatives from several Indigenous groups from the U.S. Pacific Northwest were in D.C. this week for meetings with White House officials and lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau agreed to pursue a tentative agreement by this summer to address water pollution in the Elk-Kootenai watershed, which extends from B.C. through several U.S. states.
But last week’s meetings in Ottawa stopped short of what conservationists and Indigenous leaders want: a full bilateral investigation under the terms of the 1909 Boundary Waters Treaty.