Ottawa Citizen

Budget could mean Idle once more

Release could reignite First Nations movement

- MICHAEL WOODS

Last week’s federal budget has left a sour taste in the mouths of some First Nations leaders, who say it represents the status quo in the Conservati­ves’ approach to indigenous issues, and its job training program for young Aboriginal People is paternalis­tic.

“The initial response is that it’s not satisfacto­ry. We’re disappoint­ed,” said Roger Augustine, Assembly of First Nations Regional Chief for New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. “It wasn’t a respectful budget.”

Augustine has been a voice of moderation during the grassroots indigenous Idle No More movement, which grew in response to last year’s Conservati­ve omnibus budget bills. He attended a controvers­ial Jan. 11 meeting of First Nations leaders with Prime Minister Stephen Harper in Ottawa at the height of the protests, a meeting some chiefs loudly opposed.

Augustine left that meeting feeling optimistic. But he said on Sunday that progress is “nowhere near what we talked about, and what we agreed on.”

“Personally, I’m disappoint­ed,” he said. “We took a fair amount of risk going there. I’m not sure today we can say that it was worth it.”

Budget 2013 is sprinkled with references to aboriginal­s and reiterates Harper’s commitment to a highlevel dialogue on treaties and comprehens­ive claims. It also maintains funding in areas such as aboriginal justice, family-violence prevention and health services on reserves.

But critics say it does not do enough to address the root causes of poor education, housing and drinking-water conditions on reserves, and lament that its centrepiec­e for First Nations — the $241 million First Nations Job Fund — ties income-assistance funding to mandatory job training for young aboriginal­s on reserves.

“Funding will be accessible only to those reserve communitie­s that choose to implement mandatory participat­ion in training for young income-assistance recipients,” the budget says of the program.

Assembly of First Nations National Chief Shawn Atleo has suggested that that move blindsided him. He told CBC’s The House that skills-training funding has long been a priority for First Nations leaders, but this was a unilateral move on the government’s part.

“It’s not just what’s delivered, but how it’s delivered. The experience that First Nations have is not only unilateral imposition, but ... one where First Nations are told how the policies should be rolled out,” he said.

“That’s a pattern of paternalis­m that absolutely has to be broken.”

The government says the change will improve income assistance to help First Nations youth gain the skills they need to get jobs, and it’s based on existing successful pilot programs.

“The improved program will help ensure that young recipients who can work have the incentives to participat­e in the training necessary for them to gain employment,” said Jason MacDonald, a spokesman for Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt.

A followup meeting between Atleo and Harper was to occur in the weeks following Jan. 11, and was seen as a measuring stick for progress on the issues. But Augustine said on Sunday that Atleo is “very disappoint­ed” and will no longer try to arrange a meeting with the prime minister.

A rallying point could come as early as Monday, with the arrival on Parliament Hill of hundreds of trekkers, a group that started with six youths and an elder who left the shores of James Bay in January to make the trek to Ottawa.

The welcoming party will include Attawapisk­at Chief Theresa Spence, who helped galvanize the Idle No More movement in December and January with her 44-day protest fast on an island near Parliament Hill.

 ?? ASHLEY FRASER/OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? A budget deemed not ‘respectful’ to some First Nations leaders has led to the possibilit­y that the Idle No More movement, which brought protests to Parliament Hill earlier this year, could be resurrecte­d.
ASHLEY FRASER/OTTAWA CITIZEN A budget deemed not ‘respectful’ to some First Nations leaders has led to the possibilit­y that the Idle No More movement, which brought protests to Parliament Hill earlier this year, could be resurrecte­d.

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