Winnipeg’s drinking water source of frustration for Indigenous community
TORONTO — About 100 million litres of fresh water flows west to the city of Winnipeg every day but the struggling Indigenous people who live on the shores of Shoal Lake say no benefits have ever flowed east to them.
Compensation is decades overdue, they say, and they’re now hoping favourable developments in their $500-million lawsuit against the city and the province of Ontario will tilt the odds their way.
Gerald Lewis, chief of the Anishinaabe community that lives on the sole source of Winnipeg’s drinking water, says it’s high time to negotiate compensation. The money, he says, would help with much needed housing, health care and economic opportunities.
“For the city, if they had no drinking water, where would they be at?” Lewis said. “They’re thriving economically over there with the resource that they’re taking from us, and here we are and we’re struggling to better our community.”