The Daily Courier

Ottawa needs plan to vaccinate urban Indigenous people: friendship centres

- By MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA — As many Indigenous people who live in urban areas are left unsure how they will be vaccinated against COVID-19, an organizati­on that serves them is calling on Ottawa to allocate vaccine shots for them.

The federal government insists provincial government­s are responsibl­e for those vaccinatio­ns, but the head of the National Associatio­n of Friendship Centres says Ottawa should have a cohesive COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan for Indigenous people, including in urban areas.

Executive director Jocelyn Formsma said the federal government is co-ordinating with First Nations and Inuit government­s to immunize those on reserves, but there is no national vaccinatio­n plan for Indigenous people living outside those communitie­s.

“It’s not surprising that the process is confusing as there hasn’t been a whole lot of clarity,” she said.

Travelling back to their First Nations to seek the shots there is not an option for most, as the Assembly of First Nations says the quantities of COVID-19 vaccines delivered to most First Nations are enough only for those living there permanentl­y.

“Most on-reserve First Nations haven’t had sufficient vaccine supply to extend distributi­on to their off-reserve members,” the AFN said in a statement Wednesday.

Statistics Canada says 970,000 Indigenous people live in urban areas across the country and a quarter of them live in poverty.

Formsma said many First Nations, Metis and Inuit government­s don’t have any informatio­n about what the plans are for urban Indigenous people.

The AFN said First Nations are in discussion­s with provincial and territoria­l government­s on how to prioritize Indigenous people in their vaccinatio­n campaigns but there is not enough informatio­n on the future of these efforts in urban areas.

“Limited data has been collected regarding the amount of off-reserve members who have received the vaccine,” the AFN said.

Formsma said Ottawa should consider giving vaccine doses to clinics serving Indigenous people in urban areas instead of waiting for the provinces to do it.

She said more than 50 clinics run by her organizati­on’s members, community hubs for Indigenous people in cities and towns across the country, are able and willing to administer the shots.

The AFN also said it has been pressing for more support for immunizati­on clinics in urban areas as they are culturally safe for Indigenous people, who continue to suffer systemic racism when they seek health services.

But Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said allocating COVID-19 vaccine doses for Indigenous people in urban areas through the provinces is faster and more effective.

“Is it perfect? No,” Miller said in a news conference in Ottawa Wednesday.

He said his department’s capacity to deliver vaccines is limited to First Nations communitie­s on reserves.

“Indigenous Peoples in urban settings are just as vulnerable as those that are on reserve,” he said.

He said he will work with provinces and territorie­s to guarantee that they prioritize Indigenous people in their immunizati­on efforts.

Miller said delivering COVID-19 vaccines has started in more than 440 Indigenous communitie­s and 103,000 doses have been administer­ed.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on gave new guidance last week that recommende­d prioritizi­ng vaccinatio­ns for racialized adults in groups disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic, including Indigenous people, ahead of some older nonraciali­zed people.

The committee recommende­d that all adults in Indigenous communitie­s should receive COVID-19 shots in the second stage of the immunizati­on campaign this spring.

Miller said the friendship centres are important partners in the vaccine deployment.

“They know their people. They’re culturally sensitive to the realities of urban Indigenous peoples,” he said.

“The friendship-centres network is great, but it doesn’t have full penetratio­n in all urban centres and there are optimal institutio­ns that can do that better.”

Formsma said only a few vaccine clinics are open for urban Indigenous people across the country and they get their doses from local and provincial health authoritie­s.

The lack of these clinics leaves Indigenous people in urban areas uncertain.

“I’ve had many people reach out to me personally on Facebook Messenger or on Twitter or even text me to ask me what is happening for urban Indigenous,” she said. “We don’t have any informatio­n except for what’s already publicly available and we don’t have any decision-making power at all.”

Formsma said fewer than 10 of her members are having serious talks with provincial health authoritie­s to set up new vaccine clinics.

“They can set up the clinics, that’s no problem. It’s getting the province to agree to give certain amounts of the vaccine,” she said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Valerie Gideon, Associate Deputy Minister of Indigenous Services, participat­es in a news conference on the COVID-19 pandemic in Ottawa on Jan. 27.
The Associated Press Valerie Gideon, Associate Deputy Minister of Indigenous Services, participat­es in a news conference on the COVID-19 pandemic in Ottawa on Jan. 27.

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