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New Indigenous Participation and Dispute Rules

Full Title:
Environmental Assessement Amendment Act, 2026

Summary#

This bill updates how B.C.’s Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) works with Indigenous nations during project reviews. It creates new tools to solve problems early, sets rules for who can take part, and increases transparency. It also clarifies that U.S.-based tribes cannot use these new participation or dispute processes.

Key changes:

  • Creates an “issue resolution protocol” that sets up a technical table (staff-level) and a leadership table (senior-level) to work through concerns and try to reach agreement.
  • Lets either side start a dispute-resolution process on certain key decisions, with a neutral facilitator writing a report.
  • Requires the EAO head to give written reasons if they decline to set up discussions or stop trying to agree on dispute terms.
  • Publishes basic information about disputes and facilitator reports, with confidential parts protected.
  • Defines “participating Indigenous nation” for these processes, and excludes U.S.-based tribes from taking part. Any past dispute referrals made by U.S.-based tribes are ended.
  • Clarifies that the new protocol process does not apply to assessments of amendments to existing environmental assessment certificates. Older projects already in the system will follow a standard protocol instead.

What it means for you#

  • Indigenous nations in B.C.

    • You can signal interest to participate in an assessment. If you do this at the start of the process, the EAO must discuss setting up an issue resolution protocol with technical and leadership tables.
    • If you signal interest later, the EAO may choose whether to set up those discussions and must give written reasons if it declines.
    • You can seek dispute resolution on certain pending EAO decisions. Both sides must agree on the dispute’s terms and the facilitator. If there is no agreement, there is no dispute process.
    • You will receive facilitator reports on disputes for projects you are involved in, even if you were not a party to that specific dispute.
    • These tools are not available for assessments that only amend an existing certificate.
  • U.S.-based tribes

    • You are not eligible to be a “participating Indigenous nation” under these new processes.
    • Any earlier disputes you referred under the old rules are ended.
  • Project proponents (companies or agencies seeking approval)

    • You will see a clearer, staged process for raising and escalating issues with participating Indigenous nations through technical and leadership tables.
    • If a dispute goes to a facilitator, you will receive the report. Reports do not set precedents for other projects.
    • Some information about disputes on your project will be published, with confidential parts protected.
  • General public and communities

    • The EAO will publish basic details about disputes and facilitator reports, which can improve transparency about how concerns are handled during assessments.
    • The new, structured approach aims to surface and address issues earlier in the review.
  • Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) and government staff

    • New duties include setting up and running technical and leadership tables, considering policies developed with Indigenous nations, giving written reasons when declining discussions, and publishing dispute information.
    • Government can make regulations to define facilitator powers and identify entities treated as U.S.-based tribes for these rules.

Expenses#

Estimated fiscal impact: No publicly available information.

  • The bill creates new processes (tables, facilitation, publishing), which could add administrative costs, but no official estimate is provided.

Proponents' View#

  • Builds stronger, earlier collaboration with Indigenous nations by setting clear forums (technical and leadership tables) to work through issues.
  • Creates a practical path to resolve disagreements without court action, using neutral facilitators.
  • Improves transparency by publishing dispute summaries and reports while protecting confidential information.
  • Brings more predictability to assessments by defining who can participate and how disputes move forward.
  • Focuses resources on B.C.-based Indigenous participation in provincial assessments.

Opponents' View#

  • Could add steps and complexity that make project reviews longer or less certain, especially if parties cannot agree on dispute terms.
  • Excluding U.S.-based tribes may limit cross-border Indigenous voices on projects with transboundary effects.
  • Facilitator reports are not binding and set no precedent, which some may see as weak enforcement.
  • The EAO head can choose not to start discussions or can stop trying to agree on dispute terms, which critics may view as too much discretion.
  • Limits apply to amendment reviews of existing certificates, which some may see as missing a chance to address ongoing concerns.