The Standard (St. Catharines)

Creating new Indigenous Services department more effective in long term: CMHC

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — The need to establish a new Indigenous Services ministry could complicate First Nations housing in the short term, but the system will be more streamline­d and effective in the long haul, says the head of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.

Indigenous housing needs a lasting solution for generation­s to come, Evan Siddall said in a recent interview with The Canadian Press, and there’s nothing wrong with the government stepping back to examine how best to create better outcomes.

Through the CMHC, the federal government provides funding each year to address housing needs in First Nation communitie­s.

Considerab­le changes are underway in Ottawa, however, after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveiled in August a plan to split the existing Department of Indigenous Affairs into two separate entities.

Jane Philpott has been tapped to oversee Indigenous Services, focusing on issues like health and housing, while Carolyn Bennett will tackle the Crown’s relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples — an oft-stated priority for the Trudeau government.

“At a very basic level, this employee doesn’t know if she works for this minister or that ministry yet, and they’ve got to figure it out,” Siddall said.

“They’ve got to take that personal distractio­n, put it aside and get to work.”

It is clear the current approach has not worked, Siddall added, noting he is pleased to see the federal government looking a distinct Indigenous housing strategy, given the desperate level of need in Canada’s Aboriginal communitie­s.

It’s the most acute poverty problem in the country, “full stop, ” Siddall said.

“You can’t ultimately have a full housing strategy for the country if you can’t address your area of most acute need,” he said.

“But the way we address it has to be different because of the nature of those communitie­s, and it has to be different because of the commitment of the prime minister to do this on a nation-to-nation basis.”

The department­al changes have also led to anxiety among employees at Health Canada’s First Nations Inuit Health branch, according to the Union of Health and Environmen­t Workers, but Philpott has said consultati­ons will be part of the ongoing work.

Details will be spelled out in legislatio­n expected this spring.

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