Medicine Hat News

Budget ignores Indigenous infrastruc­ture needs: AFN

- ALESSIA PASSAFIUME

The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations is denouncing a federal budget that she says all but ignores the needs of the communitie­s she represents.

The federal government is neglecting a long-standing promise to close the widening First Nations infrastruc­ture gap by 2030, Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak said Wednesday in Ottawa.

And her fellow chiefs are angry that they were not consulted on the federal government’s plans to transform federal land into housing for Canadians.

“Now, more than ever, we need to be working together in a good way to make sure First Nations and Canada achieve our full potential by working together and continuing on the path of reconcilia­tion,” Woodhouse Nepinak said.

“Which, unfortunat­ely, I did not hear in the speech yesterday.”

Neither Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s 3,500word budget speech Tuesday nor Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s remarks to caucus Wednesday made mention of reconcilia­tion or Indigenous Peoples.

Woodhouse Nepinak called Freeland’s speech “alarming.”

It’s a far cry from 2015, when a new, more productive relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples was a key plank in Trudeau’s successful Liberal election platform.

The Indigenous services minister says the government remains committed to the same ideals, despite there being no mention of Indigenous Peoples in the speeches.

“I wouldn’t say $9 billion is a drop in priority,” Patty Hajdu told reporters after the Liberal caucus meeting Wednesday, referring to the total sum of money put forward in the budget for Indigenous communitie­s.

“I think that our ambitious investment­s have gone a long way. We have more, for example, in schools and housing in this budget, but we’re going to need to be very solutions focused” to close the infrastruc­ture gap, she said.

Woodhouse Nepinak, meanwhile, said she wants Trudeau and Freeland to explain the budget in person when the AFN meets in Montreal in July.

A recent AFN report found it will take $349 billion to bring Indigenous infrastruc­ture to the same standard as elsewhere in Canada - and that without prompt action, the gap will only continue to grow.

Trudeau pledged to close the infrastruc­ture gap by 2030, but the federal auditor general concluded earlier this year that it’s only getting wider.

The needs include housing, water treatment plants, roads, schools and ports, among other things.

The AFN is also upset about not being consulted on the federal government’s budget promise to earmark underused federal lands to ease Canada’s housing crunch.

“Our entire team was talking about that this morning,” Woodhouse Nepinak said.

Acting Ontario regional Chief Abram Benedict noted the divestitur­e of federal properties includes a priority list that determines who gets first right of refusal, but First Nations are third on the list after provinces and municipali­ties - something he called “unacceptab­le.”

“When it’s our treaty partners, and those are traditiona­l territorie­s that are within all of our lands across Turtle Island, we need to have first priority so that our homes, our communitie­s, can continue to prosper,” said Benedict.

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