Calgary Herald

More COVID funding for Indigenous peoples

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OTTAWA • The federal government is planning to spend $650 million more to help Indigenous communitie­s cope with the pandemic, after months of First Nations, Inuit and Metis leaders saying the previous amount was inadequate.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says $285 million of this will support rapid public health responses in Indigenous communitie­s when faced with an outbreak of COVID-19.

“These funds will go toward more nurses, will help procure specialize­d supplies and will support work with First Nations, Inuit and Metis communitie­s on continued community-driven responses,” Trudeau said Friday outside his Rideau Cottage residence.

The government had previously committed $305 million to help First Nations reserves, and Inuit and Metis communitie­s, with supplies, medical care and facilities to allow for physical distancing.

Since that initial funding was announced in March, Indigenous leaders from across Canada have said it would not be enough to prevent the most vulnerable people from falling through the cracks.

National Chief Perry Bellegarde of the Assembly of First Nations applauded the new investment Friday, saying he had once again urged Trudeau to do more during a recent conversati­on.

“Today, (Indigenous Services) Minister Marc Miller and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made the necessary commitment­s to help ensure no one is left behind,” Bellegarde said in a tweet.

Although the first wave of COVID-19 appears to be receding, the threat of a second wave is real and Indigenous communitie­s continue to be among the population­s most vulnerable due to long-standing health and social disparitie­s in their communitie­s, Miller said.

“The federal government has a direct responsibi­lity to provide direct health care in some First Nation communitie­s and these funds enable us to live up to our obligation to provide quality care and support them, especially so in times of crisis,” he said.

The money announced Friday will also go to some of the most vulnerable individual­s and families who rely on the on-reserve income assistance program.

The assistance program will see a $270 million increase overall, with $139 million of this funding going toward direct COVID-19 response, and the remainder going toward sustaining base funding for this program.

“Our collective goal is to make sure individual­s and families can go through this pandemic with the most support that they can get — that they can face this new reality with as little stress and anxiety as possible when it comes to their income and that they can, first and foremost, stay safe and healthy,” Miller said.

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