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Thoughts from a Gathering of the Toronto Chapter of the Council of Canadians

This post is written by Alexa Bradley from On the Commons.

Great Lakes

Great Lakes

"The commons starts with common ideas and common understandings" was how Gavin McGrath described the experience of the recent Council of Canadians Forum focused on the Great Lakes as a Commons. For the past four years, our Toronto Chapter of The Council of Canadians has invited water experts, and representatives from organizations that are concerned about how our aquifers, rivers and lakes are being overused and abused, to express their concerns in public. The meeting was held in a conference room overlooking Lake Ontario and included a range of communities and presenters including Water Keepers, Idle No More, National Union of Farmers, On The Commons, and more. The overall quality and content of the presentations has never been higher. It was great to be able to sit right on the lake with the sun shining and speak with new friends and colleagues about what the water means to them, and why they are passionate about its care and preservation. The number and nature of the threats and obstacles can seem overwhelming, but one person and one community at a time we can change the discussion and build a relentless force for positive change. We would like in future meetings to expand the participation to include fishermen, the cottage associations, the sports anglers. Plans are already underway for next year. Watch this site for details.

Politics Based on Justice, Diplomacy Based on Love

What Indigenous diplomatic traditions can teach us

This article is cross-posted from Briarpatch Magazine and written by Leanne Simpson. Leanne Simpson is of Mississauga Nishnaabeg ancestry and is the author of Dancing on Our Turtle’s Back: Stories of Nishnaabeg Re-Creation, Resurgence and a New Emergence. She is the editor of Lightening the Eighth Fire: The Liberation, Resurgence and Protection of Indigenous Nations and This is an Honour Song: Twenty Years Since the Blockades, all published by Arbeiter Ring Publishing in Winnipeg.

A few months ago, I travelled from Mississauga, Anishinaabeg territory on the north shore of Lake Ontario, to Victoria, B.C., to speak in the Indigenous governance program’s lecture series. Before I left, I consulted with an Elder to remind myself of the protocols and diplomatic traditions we carry with us when visiting another nation. I wanted to make sure that I was respectful of both my Ancestors and of the Peoples whose homelands I was visiting.

Doug Williams from Curve Lake First Nation always makes time to meet with me and answer my questions. He reminded me to acknowledge the territory I was visiting directly after I had shared with the audience my clan affiliation, where I was from, and my name. We talked about how as a visitor in another’s territory, my primary responsibility would be to listen and to take direction from my gracious hosts. We talked about our protocols and processes of engagement that foster and maintain good relationships between our nation and neighbouring nations. We talked about how even though I am not a political leader, I carry those responsibilities no matter where I go. Off I went to Victoria.

I spoke in the First Peoples House at the University of Victoria, a beautiful building designed in the Coast Salish style. At the end of my talk, after having acknowledged that I was in the territories of the WSÀNÈC and the Lekwungen nations, a WSÀNÈC student came over and thanked me for that recognition. Although he couldn’t understand exactly what I said in my language, he heard the word “WSÀNÈC” and recognized my engagement with the protocols and philosophies of Anishinaabeg diplomacy. He was appreciative that I had invoked Indigenous political protocols of engagement even though our two nations have no formal diplomatic ties.

Had I been moving to Victoria, this kind of diplomacy would have carried even greater responsibilities. According to my own traditions, I would have a responsibility to listen, to learn, and to appreciate the jurisdiction, political culture, and traditions of the nation within which I was residing. I would have a responsibility to understand the issues this nation was facing, and I would have an obligation to support them and to stand with them. I would have a sacred duty to learn about my place and role within their political structure and their culture, and I would expect the same if one of their citizens moved to my territory.

A few weeks later, in the same room I spoke in at the University of Victoria, local Idle No More organizers held a teach-in. It was broadcast online and attracted over 1,000 people between the webcast and the live audience. Wab Kinew, a well-known Anishinaabe from the northwestern part of our nation, was one of the speakers. During his presentation he passed out gifts to the other panelists. Watching online, I smiled as he did this. Kinew was invoking the protocols of Anishinaabeg engagement. He was pointing to ancient traditions and acknowledging their importance and their relevance in contemporary society. He was honouring his hosts and fellow panelists.

Drawing on diplomatic traditions

Idle No More is the most recent surge in Indigenous resistance, a resistance that has been ongoing since the beginning of colonial conquest. Throughout history, Indigenous Peoples have continuously engaged in diplomatic traditions to seek restitution from the Crown for the abuses suffered under colonial rule and to forge a new, peaceful relationship. Each nation has its own spiritual and political mechanisms, rooted in its own unique legal system, for maintaining the boundaries of territory, for immigration and citizenship, and for developing and maintaining relationships with other nations regarding territory, the protection of shared lands, economy, and well-being, among many other things. Indigenous diplomatic traditions generate peace by rebalancing conflict between parties. Spiritual and social practices such as storytelling, the oral tradition, ceremonies, feasting, and gift-giving are designed to bond people together toward a common understanding. Our diplomacy concerns itself with reconciliation, restitution, mediation, negotiation, and maintaining sacred and political alliances between peoples.

The Idle No More movement has referenced these diplomatic traditions repeatedly in both our actions and our words. In early December, the media showed images of Wiindawtegowinini (Isadore Day), chief of Serpent River First Nation, carrying the 1764 Treaty of Niagara Covenant Chain Wampum Belt onto Parliament Hill. The Onondaga nation and its Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign brought a large replica of the Two Row Wampum into the city streets, and countless grassroots leaders have talked about the importance of honouring treaties as a way of transforming the relationships between Indigenous nations and the Canadian state.

On the West Coast in mid-February, hereditary Chief Beau Dick of the Kwakwaka’wakw nation walked from his homeland to the legislature in Victoria to perform a ceremony that involved breaking copper. To the Kwakwaka’wakw people, copper is a symbol of justice, truth, and balance, and to break copper in ceremony communicates a threat, an insult, or a challenge. Chief Dick and his supporters performed the ceremony on the lawn of the legislature because they want to change the political relationship they have with Canada – like their Ancestors, they are demanding a relationship based on justice, truth, balance, and protection of their homeland, the environment, and their way of life.

A sacred bond

Going to public school in the 1980s in rural southern Ontario, I learned nothing about Indigenous diplomacy. My experience is by no means unique. Unless Canadians have taken it upon themselves to seek out Indigenous political traditions, they likely have encountered few opportunities to learn about Indigenous diplomacy and our legal and political perspectives – yet it is precisely these concepts that hold the most promise for resetting the relationship with Canada.

For us in the Mississauga part of the Anishinaabeg nation, treaties are ongoing relationships. The word relationship is paramount here. Anishinaabeg political and philosophical traditions emphasize good relationships – with the natural world and with neighbouring nations – as the basis of good governance and a good life. For Anishinaabeg, signing a treaty means a commitment to ongoing meaningful negotiations. It means a political relationship that recognizes and respects parties’ nationhoods, legal traditions, and sovereignties. This is true whether the agreement is between the Anishinaabeg and the natural world, another Indigenous nation or confederacy, or a nation-state.

Treaties, from this perspective, are alliances with a commitment to continual renewal. Our politics are embedded within our spirituality, making treaties a shared, sacred bond between peoples. They are a commitment to stand with each other, a responsibility to take care of shared lands, and an appreciation of each other’s well-being. They are based on a profound mutual respect, and they are meant to be transformative. They transform conflict into peace by holding parties accountable for past injustices. They transform hardship into sustenance. They transform abuse of power into balanced relations. Treaties and other Indigenous diplomatic traditions transform differing perspectives into, as the Haudenosaunee say, “one mind.”

While Canada continues to engage in narrowly defined “modern treaty making” through processes like the B.C. Treaty Process and the federal Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements that require Indigenous nations to give up title and terminate many of their rights, Indigenous nations are moving forward with the resurgence of their own diplomatic traditions.

In 2011, a small delegation of people from Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug (KI) First Nation in northwestern Ontario travelled to Ardoch Algonquin First Nation (AAFN) in central Ontario to receive a Wampum Belt, or treaty, made by the women of AAFN. The bond between the two communities goes back to 2008 when members of the KI council were jailed for refusing to allow mining exploration in their territory. At the same time, Ardoch community member Bob Lovelace was also jailed for his role in resisting uranium prospecting in Ardoch territory. Paula Sherman, a family head on the traditional governing council of the AAFN, said at the ceremony: “As we present this belt, we pledge the support of our community to yours as you continue to deal with mining companies and governments.” Cecelia Begg, a member of the KI council and also a member of the KI Six who were jailed in 2008, accepted the belt on behalf of her community, saying, “We thank you for this. It marks our strong bond, a bond we may need to call upon as we face another struggle.”

Even in a modern context, treaties are a storied political relationship, consolidating sacred bonds between peoples. They are not about the cession of land or the surrender of Aboriginal title, nor do they assimilate Indigenous law into Canadian law. They are not a bill of sale. They are not a policy discussion. Whether the treaty-making process is historic or contemporary, treaties are not termination agreements.

Separate sovereignties on a shared territory

There is much evidence both in the oral tradition and in the historical record that, over time, Canada engaged in a treaty-making process that was increasingly based on coercion, deception, and violence. The Cree signed Treaty 6 while facing starvation from the massacre of the buffalo, a smallpox epidemic, and increasing settler violence. The final report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples documents several examples of misunderstandings, problems in translation, and acts of fraud on the part of the state. Although the numbered treaties were negotiated in the oral tradition of Indigenous diplomacy, the Crown failed to record Indigenous perspectives on these agreements. They did not implement what they agreed to within their own legal traditions and written documents, let alone Indigenous oral understandings.

So yes, the treaty-making process in Canada was fraught with duress. Yet, even as the political power was shifting in favour of settler governments during the signing of the numbered treaties, Indigenous leaders continued to exercise agency within the process. The negotiations for Treaty 3 were extremely difficult, and the Crown ended up making several concessions to the Anishinaabeg. Treaty 7 was negotiated under the reality that the Blackfoot Confederacy had been successful in defending their territory from outside encroachment. Indigenous Peoples still believe in the strength of their oral understandings of these agreements because, even under the threat of violence, our Ancestors made intelligent and far-reaching decisions as best they could.

Instead of interacting with First Nations through these negotiated international agreements, successive Canadian governments have chosen to interact with First Nations through the Indian Act. This continues to be a crucial mistake. Many of us believe Indigenous diplomacy is the best way forward in developing a just and fair relationship with the Canadian state, because this kind of diplomacy carries within it the terms for a nation-to-nation relationship that is respectful of separate sovereignties and nationhoods over a shared territory.

Oftentimes, divisions between Indigenous nations that signed historic treaties and nations that did not are amplified in the mainstream media. It’s an arbitrary division because treaties are simply the embodiment of a much larger set of politics and philosophies rooted in each nation’s system of international law, peacemaking, conflict resolution, and negotiation. The fundamental principles of protection of land and Indigenous ways of life, governance, nationhood, sovereignty, sharing, and non-interference remain consistent whether manifested in Mi’kmaq law or Gitksan Witsuwit’en law and regardless of whether Indigenous nations signed treaties or not.

We are all treaty people

When I asked my Elder about how to behave in another nation’s territory, he reminded me that it is individuals who carry political responsibilities within them. Indigenous diplomacy is not so much about dialogue, but about action and embodiment. Treaties are not just between Indigenous nations and the Canadian state; they are carried and acted out through the actions of individual people. In December of last year, Idle No More organizers in Toronto organized a large round dance in the intersection of Yonge and Dundas. During the round dance, I saw a non-Native man with a sign that read, “We are all Treaty People.” Under that, he had written the treaties that he was a part of, based on where he was currently living and where he grew up. He was reminding his fellow Canadians that they have enjoyed treaty rights for hundreds of years, and that they also need to uphold their treaty responsibilities.

Mohawk scholar Taiaiake Alfred notes that Idle No More has demonstrated that many Canadians are supportive of a principled movement lead by Indigenous Peoples that addresses the protection of the land and the environmental, social, economic, and political issues facing Indigenous communities. If the resurgence of Indigenous political traditions is widely seen as the next step in decolonizing our relationship with Canada, it is critical that we understand and recognize the contemporary resilience and manifestations of Indigenous diplomacy. This kind of peacemaking is diplomacy based on love – the love of land and the love of our people – and this alone has the power to transform Indigenous-state relations into a relationship based on justice, respect, and responsibility.

See the original article here at Briarpatch Magazine.

Lake Superior Youth Symposium, May 16-19

Lake Superior Youth Symposium

Lake Superior Youth Symposium

The Lake Superior Youth Symposium is celebrating it's 10th Biennal this year, from May 16-19 at the Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Michigan. The Symposium aims to inform, inspire and motivate students and teachers to become stewards of Lake Superior and the Great Lakes. The goal of the symposium is to increase understanding of challenging environmental and scientific issues, enhance appreciation for Lake Superior’s beauty and history, promote personal involvement in creating solutions, and encourage participants to build upon their symposium experience in their schools and communities after the event.

At the symposium, students and teachers will attend presentations and field trips conducted by Michigan Technical University faculty and graduate students, natural resource professionals, artists, writers, historians, and educators. More than 50 different presentations and field trips are planned on a variety of topics, including fisheries and wildlife, water quality, forest ecology and management, geology, Great Lakes threats and uses, conservation, sustainability, writing, art, photography, and student initiatives.

If you are interested in learning more about the event or signing up to attend, please visit the Lake Superior Youth Symposium's website or find them on Facebook.

Protecting the Great Lakes

This article is cross-posted from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Online and is written by Maude Barlow. Maude Barlow is the national chairwoman of the Council of Canadians and chairs the board of Washington-based Food and Water Watch.

The Great Lakes are in serious trouble. Lake Huron and Lake Michigan are at their lowest levels since record keeping began in 1918, and the levels of Lakes Superior, Ontario and Erie are also well below average.

Lake levels in Milwaukee are creating uncertainty for residents who are unsure how lower levels will affect storm water runoff, the shipping and fishing industry and their livelihoods. The situation could be exacerbated by a proposal to transport water from Lake Michigan via pipeline to Waukesha residents, which requires approval under the Great Lakes compact.

Pollution, climate change, over-extraction and invasive species are all taking their toll on the watershed that provides life and livelihood to more than 40 million people and thousands of species that live around it. The Great Lakes are a source of increasing concern as residents watch their shorelines recede, their beaches close and their fisheries decline.

Adding to these concerns is a Wisconsin bill aimed at streamlining the mining permitting process, which was signed last month, reducing environmental standards for iron mining and threatening water sources.

The story of the global water crisis sets the stage all over the world: to feed the increasing demands of a consumer-based system. We have built our economic and development policies based on a human-centric model and assumed that nature would never fail to provide or that, where it does fail, technology will save the day.

What might happen if the citizens living around the Great Lakes, including in Milwaukee, decided to collectively protect them based on some of the very principles and practices that informed the first peoples of the region, namely that the Great Lakes must be shared equitably by all who live around them and protected for seven generations into the future? What if governments managed the lakes based on the human right to water, incorporated public input and prioritized public and indigenous rights over private interests?

These ideas form the basis of an emerging new vision for the Great Lakes, one that is based on the notion of the "Commons" and Public Trust Doctrine.

A group of legal experts from Canada and the United States have described a Commons approach as one which requires that "we envision water as a shared resource and so recognize our shared responsibility to carefully steward our water resources. The goal of a Commons approach to water is to ensure that there is sufficient water to meet human and ecological and community needs for many generations to come."

The Public Trust Doctrine holds that certain natural resources, including groundwater, belong to the community and cannot be privately owned or controlled. This means that governments, as trustees, are obliged to protect these resources for the common good and ensure that they are not appropriated for private gain.

Unless we shift the current "business as usual" model and create real sustainable jobs, the Great Lakes will remain in peril and we as a generation will have failed future generations in protecting the region's largest and most precious watershed. Protecting the future of the Great Lakes is in all of our hands. When communities come together with passion and purpose, they can change political priorities and shape a better future for these precious lakes.

Rochester Groups are Protecting the Great Lakes Forever

This article is cross-posted from the Council of Canadians' blog and is written by Emma Lui. The original post can be found here.

I just got home from an incredible event in Rochester, New York, the fourth Great Lakes tour stop. Maude Barlow, National Chairperson for the Council of Canadians, has been touring around the Great Lakes speaking out about threats to the Great Lakes and what we need to do to stop them once and for all. We began the Great Lakes tour last year where we visited eight cities and continued the tour this year with events already in Duluth, Milwaukee and Grand Rapids.

Wayne Howard, Linda Isaacson Fedele, Kate Kremer and Peter Debes of Rochester Sierra Club, Eric and Jim Olson from FLOW for water along with the support of Cool Rochester, Monroe Community College and Rochester Institute of Technology, did an incredible job organizing an thought-provoking and inspiring event.

On Thursday night Maude gave a riveting talk to a captivated audience of 300 about the serious threats plaguing the Great Lakes including fracking, pollution, low water levels and inequitable extraction. Recognizing the amazing work that groups have been doing to protect the lakes for decades, she outlined a needed shift in decision and policy making around the Great Lakes and outlined a framework on how to effectively address the threats to Great Lakes, so we’re not simply fighting one fight after another.

Maude put forward a vision of the Great Lakes that protects a community’s right to say ‘no’ to projects harmful to water sources, incorporates community input into decision making and prioritize communities’ rights to water over private interests. These ideas form the basis of the notion that the Great Lakes are a commons and public trust. The notion of the commons, a very old concept, states that certain resources - such and air and water - are shared resources which people within a community have the collective obligation to protect. The public trust doctrine outlines governments’ obligations to protect these shared resources for community use from private exploitation.

After Maude’s talk, she was joined by Jim Olson from FLOW, Roger Downs from Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter and David Klein from the Nature Conservancy for an engaging panel discussion and to answer the audience’s questions. Jim Olson, an expert in the public trust doctrine, stressed that private rights cannot subordinate public rights.

Rochester was an important community to host a tour stop because of the water issues they’re facing. There are plans to ship fresh water by train from the region for fracking projects in Pennsylvania. Mountain Glacier, a subsidary of Nestle, is bottling water from Lake Hemlock as well as the municipality’s water. Similar to what happened in Niagara Falls, there is talk about the possibility of Monroe County, which Rochester is a part of, treating fracking wastewater.

Communities in New York state are incredibly active in the fight to protect water sources, public health and the environment against fracking. With approximately 200 municipal resolutions, New York state has by far the most resolutions on fracking in the US. Community groups and fracking coalitions have been successful in keeping a moratorium on fracking in New York state where delays in a health study are stalling Governor Cuomo’s already delayed decision on whether to lift or continue the moratorium. There have been recent calls for the environmental impact assessment to be scrapped because of Ecology and Environment and other consultations links to the Independent Oil and Gas Association of New York.

Yesterday morning Maude and Jim outlined the principles of the commons and public trust respectively and set the context for the day-long workshop where 50 engaged participants applied them to local issues. I gave short presentation of examples of our work on the commons and public trust. An ongoing case with Nestle, of which we’re parties to, is an exciting opportunity for the public trust doctrine to be recognized by the Ontario Environmental Review Tribunal. I also talked about two municipal resolutions in Burnaby and Niagara-on-the-Lake that respectively recognize water as a commons and the Great Lakes are a shared commons and public trust.

I am heartened and inspired by the enthusiasm and openness of the people we met in Rochester to embrace the needed shift in the framework governing the Great Lakes, one that will rightfully prioritize the protection of the lakes above all else. With many governments failing to protect community watersheds, the commons and public trust principles are crucial to changing people’s relationships to water to one of responsibility and stewardship and holding our governments to account so they protect water sources for today’s and future generations. People within communities like Rochester are the catalysts for this change and it is them that I place my faith and hope that we will save the Great Lakes.

Maude Barlow Speaks in Milwaukee

This post is written by Alexa Bradley, Program Director at On The Commons.

Maude Barlow

Maude Barlow

At her recent talk [on April 16th] on the Great Lakes at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Maude Barlow urged the several hundred people gathered not to wait for the politicians to protect our waters, but to get involved ourselves "armed with the belief that we have the right to care." The facts she shared about declining water quality and quantity in the Lakes and beyond were alarming. "We have lost connection to water, divorced ourselves from the ecological, spiritual and place based nature of water. We see it as something to be conquered, as a means to produce a certain type of lifestyle." She suggested we need to wake up to the "myth of abundance" that allows us to treat "water as a resource to promote profit rather than a precious gift of nature."

She asked us to consider, "what would happen if we governed the Great Lakes on the First Nations principles of the Seventh Generation" considering the impact of our decisions many generations forward. We would "protect the bio-region as a commons," she offered, "something that belongs to all of us, equitably shared and governed for the public good." She described a vision of the Great Lakes Commons governed as one body, with "strict accountability, basin wide consistent planning and laws, collectively managed." She included in her hopeful vision for the Great Lakes Commons, a recognition not only of the much greater role of local communities in water decisions but also the rights of other species and even the water itself to well being.

The most remarkable aspect of the evening was the energy at the end of her talk. Despite all the painful news she shared on the state of the Lakes, she had galvanized a sense of urgency and willingness to act. She reminded us that the future is not written but depends on what we do next.

Mississippi Water Walkers

Mississippi Water Walk 2013

Sharon Day has been walking every day since March 1st, through cold and snow, sometimes more than 30 miles each day. Day is an Ojibwe woman from Minnesota and one of five indigenous women currently walking the entire length of the Mississippi River--from the headwaters at Lake Itasca to the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi Water Walkers are carrying a copper pail of the river’s water all along their journey, planning to pour the clean water into the “dead zone” at the end of the river.

The Water Walkers hope to draw attention to the pollution in the river and educate people along the way about ways they can take action. They set off on March 1st and intend to be at the river’s delta by April 29th (and they’re on track to do so!). You can track their progress (via a GPS device attached to the pail of water) here. Join their Facebook group to get the latest updates, find ways to get involved, or join them on part of their journey!

I called Sharon back in March to get an update on the walk:

Erin Garnaas-Holmes: You are really booking it! Are you moving along faster than planned?

Sharon Day: We were three days ahead about a week ago, but now we’re about even. We still plan to arrive at the gulf around April 28th.

EG: How are your bodies holding up?

SD: Our bodies are doing okay, although we’re a little tired tonight. We have been staying at one of the Walker’s parents’ house and have been entertained by other hosts, which is very nice. The Dakota Memorial Society and the United Warrior Society out of Illinois have been very hospitable.

EG: So you’re keeping up through the cold and snow?

SD: We had anticipated 45 degree weather in Winona, MN, but it snowed there instead. And in Wabasha, and McGregor, and yesterday! There have been some pretty cool temperatures. So far so good, though, and no injuries. We’re just tired of boots. Even when it snows, it is still beautiful walking, looking at the big huge flakes. We feel very privileged.

EG: How are your spirits holding up in the cold?

SD: Good. Most of us didn’t know each other before this, so we’ve been talking about trust and support amongst each other. Lots of laughter, lots of teasing.

EG: Who has walked with you so far?

SD: All along the way people have joined in. On Saturday, three people who were with us for a week went home. On Sunday two more who were with us for four days went back to Duluth. It’s just been the five of us for the past two days. Our hosts from tonight will join us tomorrow. People who have walked with us before will walk with us again, through St. Louis, Oklahoma, Hannibal, Memphis... a woman from Minneapolis and another from the East Coast are flying into Memphis for last two weeks. Lots of people who were with us at the beginning want to fly down to New Orleans at the end. We’re hoping to have 100 walkers at the end.

EG: I know you are walking the Mississippi, but Water Walkers have walked the Great Lakes in the past. How are the journeys different? The same?

SD: I think some is the same. When we walked, last time, from Gulfport, MI, with water from Mississippi, to the Great Lakes, we walked a direct path north, which was very efficient and worked fine. This time, though, we’re hugging the river. It does feel different than bringing water to Lake Superior, where you can always hear the water. You don’t hear the Mississippi so much. Even today, we were far away from the river, and just saw lots of trash in the streams, and dead animals, farther away from the river. Maybe that’s why we’re all so tired. When we are walking right up near the river, though, it feels like we are moving with the river. Or the river is moving with us.

EG: What are you greatest hopes for the Walk?

SD: Our hope is that we will help people to reconnect with the river. Not the river as a mechanism for commerce or a mechanism for just travel or something that you use, but to reconnect with the river as this loving source of life. We want to get people to become aware that the river needs our help. We know that further south where the water is so full of chemicals and “dead zones,” that will be really hard to see. We want people to become aware that the river at the source is pure and clean--only through human intervention does she become what she is before she empties into the gulf. We hope people will pray for the water, tell the water that we love the water, be respectful, and ask her to please forgive us. We want to motivate people to be part of the solution.

The Great Lakes Commons Map

Great Lakes Commons Map

Great Lakes Commons Map

The Great Lakes Commons Map is an online, collaborative tool that tracks and maps stories relating to the Great Lakes and the growing efforts of many communities to take a commons approach in the way we relate to the Lakes. The map is a living tool that aims to build capacity for both individuals and organizations who are curious and committed to a Great Lakes Commons. As the map grows, it can become an important tool for public engagement, connecting more and more individuals and groups from across states, countries, First Nations and Native American nations.

The map was conceptualized by Paul Baines and during his bicycle tour of Lake Ontario in 2012. Many of the first “Reports” were from that trip, but now the map is expanding and has always belonged to a broader public. Text, photos, videos, and links are organized by category and location, so users are reading, seeing and hearing each other’s stories and tracking each other’s progress around the Lakes.

The ultimate goal of this map is to use the energy of the crowd (crowdsourcing) with the power of networked media to arouse our biosphere consciousness: a mind-shift that understands our interdependence with all of the earth's elements.

In the true spirit of the commons, reports and comments can be contributed by anyone and the map runs on an open-source software platform. “We are all connected to these lakes and regularly have something to offer this commons work: a story, an example, a website or video, a curiosity, a campaign, an observation, some data, a photo, or a request,” says Baines. Head over to the map now and tell your stories!

Maude Barlow Tours the Great Lakes

Maude Barlow

Council of Canadians chairperson Maude Barlow is currently taking part in a tour of seven cities to address the many challenges facing the Great Lakes. She is partnering with academics, community activists and water experts along the tour, many of whom are hosting workshops and other hands-on opportunities to learn and do more in defense of the Lakes. The tour provides an opportunity to highlight pressing issues in each of these communities.

Barlow is a renowned activist and author. She co-founded the Blue Planet Project and the International Forum on Globalization, and she is a leading member of Food & Water Watch and the World Future Council. She has been a champion of taking a commons approach to water resources throughout the world.

Learn more about Barlow’s tour here, and help us spread the word about this exciting opportunity to hear first hand from an internationally known leader on water issues!

Welcome to the Great Lakes Commons Blog

Great Lakes Commons

Welcome to the Great Lakes Commons Blog. This blog will track the progress of the Great Lakes Commons Initiative, which seeks to reorient water governance and ensure a healthy future for the water, the ecosystem, and communities surrounding the Great Lakes.

Ask almost anyone who lives in the Great Lakes region and they will tell you how connected they feel to these vast iconic bodies of water. And yet our Lakes are endangered – put at risk by human choices and narrow economic interests. The current governance of the Great Lakes reflects the dominant economic system, which is biased toward commercial and private interests at the expense of ecological and human well-being.

The Great Lakes Commons Initiative arose out of an understanding that fundamental change was needed if we want to create a sustaining future for our Great Lakes. We face an urgent choice—we can continue on the current path toward depletion and degradation, or we can make a dramatic change in our relationship to this living and life-giving ecosystem.

One way to achieve this goal is the establishment of a Great Lakes Charter, a new social contract guiding the ways that communities treat our shared resource. A collaboration amongst Indigenous communities, inner city groups, local community organizers, major academic and advocacy organizations, lawmakers and more in both Canada and the United States, this Charter can help develop a new shared cultural water ethic and use legal leverage to form policy.

This blog will provide updates on this Initiative and feature stories about individuals and groups working to ensure a healthy future for the Lakes. Check back often, subscribe to updates and find us on Facebook and Twitter!