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MP rebukes top housing official for chronic underfundi­ng of Prairie First Nations

- Brett Forester

A New Democrat member of Parliament rebuked a federal housing executive on Thursday, after an audit found his organizati­on shortchang­ed Prairie First Nations out of more than a quarter-billion dollars in housing cash.

Alberta MP Blake Desjar‐ lais accused the Canada Mortgage and Housing Cor‐ poration (CMHC) of structural racism and negligence after its acting president and CEO, Michel Tremblay, struggled to explain why his organizati­on uses decades-old census da‐ ta to divvy up program mon‐ ey.

"The formula is based on a tripartite agreement that we've reached with Indige‐ nous Services Canada and the Assembly of First Nations (AFN). We have not changed the formula over the years," Tremblay told the House of Commons public accounts committee on Thursday.

"We will look and work with our partners to come up with a new formula, but we will not, in the spirit of recon‐ ciliation, unilateral­ly change the formula."

Tremblay was responding to Auditor General Karen

Hogan's recent audit of CMHC and Indigenous Ser‐ vices Canada's efforts to pro‐ vide First Nations communi‐ ties with adequate housing.

In a March 19 report, Hogan found CMHC chroni‐ cally underfunde­d First Na‐ tions in Manitoba, Saskatchew­an and Alberta by $274.3 million collective­ly over 14 years, by using an outdated funding model based on 2001 census data.

Desjarlais, who is Métis from the Fishing Lake Métis Settlement in Alberta, ridiculed the argument that the funding formula couldn't be updated because of an ex‐ isting agreement with AFN, which represents chiefs countrywid­e.

"To be very frank, I'm hor‐ rified and disgusted with some of the answers presen‐ ted today - to use Indigenous peoples' very valid and legiti‐ mate right to self-determina‐ tion as an excuse to not up‐ date a funding formula, for example," the MP said.

"Mr. Tremblay, sorry, I cannot accept that a govern‐ ment would act that way. That is one of the most ne‐ farious and deceitful things a bureaucrac­y could do to hurt a population."

Tremblay confirmed the corporatio­n would work to update the formula when Desjarlais pressed further.

Among other things, the audit found CMHC and ISC have made little progress im‐ proving access to housing in First Nations and were at high risk of not closing the housing gap by 2030, the Trudeau government's stated target.

Earlier this week, the AFN released a report estimating it would cost $350-billion to fulfil that pledge, of which $135.1 billion is connected to the acute housing deficit.

After that report landed, NDP MP Niki Ashton, who has several First Nations in her northern Manitoba rid‐ ing, called the reported un‐ derfunding of communitie­s in the Prairies "grotesque" and "the stuff of lawsuits."

The CMHC boss was joined by Gina Wilson, deputy minister of Indige‐ nous Services, and Hogan herself. Wilson said her de‐ partment doesn't use out‐ dated funding formulas.

After tabling the report, Hogan decried a "distressin­g and persistent pattern of fail‐ ure" at the federal level when it comes to Indigenous pro‐ grams. She drove the point home again Thursday.

"This is the fourth time since 2003 that we are rais‐ ing the alarm bell about un‐ safe and unsuitable housing in First Nations communi‐ ties," she said.

"Adequate housing is a basic human need."

This put Wilson, who is a member of Kitigan Zibi An‐ ishinabeg, an Algonquin First Nation near Maniwaki, Que., in the hot seat.

"Indigenous Services Canada is aware of the sub‐ stantial housing gap in First Nations communitie­s," she testified.

"We are working to ad‐ dress the ongoing and pro‐ found impact of a lack of suitable housing. This is a complex issue that has span‐ ned generation­s."

But Conservati­ve MP Kelly McCauley pressed for an ad‐ mission of accountabi­lity giv‐ en the auditor's findings of persistent, repeated failures in key areas.

"We take responsibi­lity for this program," she said.

"I take responsibi­lity for this, yes."

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