Saskatoon

Sask. First Nations leaders, advocates welcome $40B child welfare settlement

Saskatchewan First Nations leaders and advocates are welcoming a deal under which the Canadian government will dedicate $40 billion to child welfare, but they say they won't rest until that money is in place.

Half of the money will compensate former children in care, half will fund future reforms

Marc Miller, then-Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister (right), said a proposed settlement for First Nations child welfare compensation was one of his biggest achievements.
AFN Regional Chief Cindy Woodhouse, left, and Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu, centre, listen to Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller during a news conference Tuesday in Ottawa where the federal government shared details of an agreement that pledges $40 billion for Indigenous child welfare. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

First Nations leaders and advocates in Saskatchewan are welcoming a deal under which the Canadian government will dedicate $40 billion to child welfare, but they say they won't rest until that money is in place.

It's the largest class action settlement in Canadian history. Half of the money is to compensate the thousands of on-reserve children who received inadequate funding while in care, and half is to reform the system to ensure it doesn't happen again.

"I want to believe. I still need to believe that the federal government genuinely wants to do some action for our children and families. I haven't seen that in any of my history. It's always an uphill, slippery battle," said Raymond Shingoose of the Yorkton Tribal Council's Yellow Thunderbird Lodge in southeast Saskatchewan.

Shingoose, a social worker for the past 35 years, worked with Cindy Blackstock and others on this case for years, fighting for the rights of First Nations children in multiple court cases, human rights tribunals and rounds of negotiations.

Longtime Saskatchewan First Nations social worker Raymond Shingoose welcomed the $40-billion child welfare settlement announced this week. (Zoom)

Shingoose said he can't believe this day is finally here. He said he'll be patient. It will take a lot of time to identify who is eligible for compensation. It's also unclear how the money will be used to reform the system.

"I'm optimistic, but I've got apprehensions. I've been here before. I've heard the promises and I've been disappointed," he said.

Shingoose said he won't rest until First Nations kids get the love and care they deserve.

WATCH | Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, joins Power & Politics to discuss details of the First Nations child welfare compensation agreement 

Cindy Blackstock: 'There's good words on paper, but nothing has changed for children'

3 years ago
Duration 7:52
Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, joins Power & Politics to discuss details of the First Nations child welfare compensation agreement, announced today by the federal government.

Dwight Newman, Canada research chair in Indigenous rights in Constitutional and international law at the University of Saskatchewan, said it was good to see funding for both past and future needs.

"Together, they add up to a lot of money, but they also reflect decades and decades of problems, as well as some very serious issues that need to be addressed today," Newman said.

In a news release, Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief Bobby Cameron called the settlement deal historic.

"Discriminatory funding and other racist decisions have led to a massive over-representation of First Nations children in the system, all at the hand of a federal child welfare system that should've protected them. The root is colonial practices and policies administered directly by Canada," Cameron said.

"The healing journey begins by keeping First Nations children and young people within our own families and communities."