Times Colonist

First Nations to help write bill on family services

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OTTAWA — The Liberal government plans to introduce federal legislatio­n on Indigenous child and family services in the new year, written in co-operation with Indigenous groups.

Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott said the child welfare system in Canada has taken Indigenous kids from their families for more than a century and that has to end now.

“This is our modern-day variation on the legacy of residentia­l schools,” she said Friday.

Most statistics suggest there are more Indigenous kids in foster care today than there were in residentia­l schools when they were at their height.

Philpott said about 80 per cent of Indigenous kids who are forced into foster care are taken from their parents because of “neglect” but that neglect is really a term for poverty. The legislatio­n will ensure poverty is not a reason to take a child from its parents.

Kids placed in foster care are at great risk for homelessne­ss, incarcerat­ion, human traffickin­g, suicide and homicide, she said.

“These are the most vulnerable children in our country. We need to listen to them. But above the noisy din of our day-to-day lives, the cries of these children are barely audible.”

Philpott made the announceme­nt alongside Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Natan Obed, and Métis National Council president Clement Chartier.

The legislatio­n is being developed in collaborat­ion with Indigenous leaders and Bellegarde said he hopes, at long last, this will be the first step toward fixing a broken system that makes broken families and broken children.

“You’re going to get a better country,” Bellegarde said.

“It’s a step. That’s what you have to hang onto. This is more hope that the number [of kids in care] will go down.”

Indigenous children account for more than 50 per cent of kids in foster care in private homes in Canada, according to government figures, and they face greater risks of health problems and incarcerat­ion.

Bellegarde said legislatio­n codevelope­d with First Nations is an important step toward fixing the system, and Obed called it an “unpreceden­ted initiative” that will ensure the survival, dignity and well-being of families and communitie­s for generation­s to come.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Métis National Council president Clement Chartier, second from left, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami Natan Obed and Assembly of First Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde, right, listen to Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott respond to a question in Ottawa on Friday.
ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Métis National Council president Clement Chartier, second from left, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami Natan Obed and Assembly of First Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde, right, listen to Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott respond to a question in Ottawa on Friday.

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