The Prince George Citizen

Indigenous child legislatio­n cause for concern, says Teegee

- Mark NIELSEN Citizen staff mnielsen@pgcitizen.ca

The provincial government missed a step when drafting new legislatio­n aimed at keeping more Indigenous children

in their communitie­s and out of state care, according to CarrierSek­ani Family Services executive director Mary Teegee.

If passed, the legislatio­n, introduced this week, will mean the Ministry of Children and Family Developmen­t will no longer need parents’ consent to reach out to a child’s First Nation and find an alternativ­e to removing the child from his or her home.

Currently, Indigenous children account for 63 per cent of the total number of children in the care of MCFD, while less than 10 per cent of the child population in B.C. is Indigenous. —

Teegee called the move a step in the right direction but noted it was done without consulting with agencies like hers.

“It was a missed opportunit­y,” she said Tuesday. “They could’ve included the agency directors. I mean, they’re the ones that are going to be providing the services on the ground to our community members.”

Teegee said implicatio­ns need to be considered.

“If it’s the chief and council making the decision and the decision leads to the harm of a child, who is liable?” she said.

Additional­ly, she said there are the ethical concerns around the privacy of an individual. And she said the agencies need the time for their legal team and social workers to review the legislatio­n.

CSFS provides delegated family and child services to 11 First Nations communitie­s in the north central regional. There are 23 such agencies across B.C.

“We get our mandate from chiefs, so we’re representi­ng about 121 chiefs in child and family services, as per the band council resolution­s so by not talking to us, you’re missing that whole segment,” Teegee said. “We are the ones who provide the actual services in communitie­s.”

Over the longer term, Teegee would like to see a B.C. Indigenous Child and Family Services Act, “that looks at child well-being through an Indigenous lens.”

In a response, Children and Family Developmen­t Minister Karen Conroy said Indigenous communitie­s and leaders have demanded change, as expressed at an emergency meeting called by the federal government in January and through the feedback from families and communitie­s that informed Grand Chief Ed John’s November 2016 report on the issue.

“We’ve heard these demands loud and clear and we are responding to the immediate need to share informatio­n, engage Indigenous communitie­s early when a family and child are vulnerable, and seek solutions outside child protection,” Conroy said.

As for consulting agencies like CSFS, Conroy said the legislatio­n amounts to an interim step to respond with the “urgency that is demanded of us” and that the agencies were briefed and feedback was sought.

“We understand that some Indigenous communitie­s would have preferred we consult more before making any changes,” Conroy said. “But others have told us it is time for action, and we agree.”

The legislatio­n, if passed, will be brought into force by regulation at a later date and

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