Medicine Hat News

Feds’ challenge of ruling on First Nations children ‘a slap in the face’: AFN

- MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA

The federal government’s appeal of a ruling that expanded First Nations children’s rights to public services is “a slap in the face,” says the Assembly of First Nations.

The November ruling by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal widened the applicabil­ity of Jordan’s Principle, a rule that says that when government­s disagree about who’s responsibl­e for providing services to First Nations children, they must help a child in need first and argue over the bills later.

In November, the tribunal ruled that the principle applies to children who live off reserves if they identify as members of a particular First Nation and that nation claims them - even if they don’t have status under the Indian Act - and to children of parents who could legally get status but do not have it.

Effectivel­y, it allows First Nations to decide whether a particular child is entitled to federally funded services, not just the federal government under the Indian Act.

Ottawa announced before Christmas it would seek a judicial review of the decision.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller told a news conference in Ottawa Wednesday that filing the appeal is a “very uncomforta­ble position to take.”

Miller said his concern is the jurisdicti­on of the tribunal to rule on issues of identity and belonging to an Indigenous community.

When the case goes to Federal Court, the government will find the Assembly of First Nations there, ready for the fight.

“If you look at the tribunal’s ruling and you look at the reasoning behind Canada submitting a judicial review, it’s flawed,” said Kevin Hart, the AFN’s regional chief for Manitoba, in an interview with The Canadian Press.

Hart said the government challenge of the tribunal’s order “was a stab in the back to us as leadership, but even more so it’s a slap in the face to our First Nations children for the government of

Canada to do this in this day and age.”

Jordan’s Principle is named for Jordan River Anderson, a First Nations boy from Norway House Cree Nation. He was born with multiple disabiliti­es and spent his whole five years of life in hospital because the federal and Manitoba government­s each insisted the other should pay for his care in a special home.

The tribunal based its November decision on several cases of “the tragic consequenc­es of Canada’s discrimina­tory policy” against First Nations children living offreserve.

One was the treatment of a 18-month-old First Nations girl living in Toronto, without status under the Indian Act.

The child, who has a rare and potentiall­y life-threatenin­g medical condition known as hyperinsul­inism, needed to travel with her parents to Edmonton in November 2018 for an essential scan only available there, according to evidence presented to the tribunal.

The government wouldn’t cover the family’s expenses due to the child’s off-reserve residency and lack of Indian Act status, but the infant’s mother was eligible to be registered and to receive First Nations status under the Indian Act.

The First Nations Child and Family Caring Society intervened and covered the medical transporta­tion expenses. Later, the organizati­on co-filed the complaint with the Assembly of First Nations that led to the recent tribunal decision.

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