Medicine Hat News

Supreme Court upholds Ottawa’s Indigenous child welfare law, denies Quebec’s appeal

- ALESSIA PASSAFIUME

Indigenous communitie­s and leaders across the country cheered Friday as the Supreme Court of Canada upheld the federal government’s child welfare law, affirming that First Nations, Metis and Inuit have sole authority over the protection of their children.

The unanimous decision is a setback for the Quebec government, which won a victory in 2022 when the Court of Appeal found that parts of the act oversteppe­d federal jurisdicti­on.

Indigenous leaders lauded the high court’s findings as dozens of the very children at the heart of the decision ran rampant around an Ottawa conference room.

“Our peoples have compromise­d enough,” said Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador regional chief Ghislain Picard.

A group of children wearing ribbon skirts, kokum scarves and ribbon shirts sat in front of him as he spoke.

“It’s time now for other government­s to do the same.”

Friday’s decision upholding the 2019 law ultimately affirmed that Indigenous Peoples have an inherent right to selfgovern­ment that includes control over child and family services.

“The act as a whole is constituti­onally valid,” the court wrote in an 110-page decision, adding that it “falls squarely within Parliament’s legislativ­e jurisdicti­on.”

Ottawa’s law affirmed the right of Indigenous Peoples to run their own child protection services and included sections that said Indigenous legislatio­n had the force of federal law and could supersede provincial law.

Assembly of First Nations national chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak called the decision a significan­t step forward.

“First Nations have never surrendere­d their jurisdicti­on over their children and families, which has existed since time immemorial,” Woodhouse Nepinak said.

“First Nations continue to have the inherent and constituti­onal right to care for our children and families, along with our sacred rights from Creator to raise our children surrounded by our cultures, languages, and traditions.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Indigenous children have “for far too long” been put in foster homes, sometimes far away from their communitie­s, that were not grounded in Indigenous language and traditions.

“That has perhaps gotten them out of harm’s way in the immediate, but has left them with scarring - loss of identity, loss of language and a disconnect­ion from their cultures that has had devastatin­g impacts.”

Asked whether, if elected, he would stand by the law, Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre said his party believes in “more autonomy for First Nations communitie­s and less paternalis­tic control by government.”

He said the Conservati­ves would “respect the rights of First Nations families to raise their own children.”

NDP MP Lori Idlout, who also serves as her party’s critic of Indigenous services, said First Nations, Metis and

Inuit had their own laws prior to Confederat­ion, and that she hopes Ottawa will respect their jurisdicti­on.

On Quebec, Idlout said she hopes the province realizes it has an obligation to foster positive relationsh­ips with Indigenous Peoples.

Nothing in the division of powers between the federal government and the provinces prevents Parliament from affirming that Indigenous Peoples’ inherent right of self... government includes legislativ­e authority over child and family services, the high court said.

“The essential matter addressed by the act involves protecting the wellbeing of Indigenous children, youth and families by promoting the delivery of culturally appropriat­e child and family services and, in so doing, advancing the process of reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples,” the court wrote.

-- with files from Anja Karadeglij­a in Ottawa

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