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Ontario First Nations endorse $47.8B child welfare reform deal

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Ontario chiefs voted Thursday to support and ratify a┬аmultibillion-dollar┬аdeal to reform the federal First Nations child and family services program.

Sixty-two of 74 First Nations leaders present voted in favour of a resolution to back the proposed settlement┬аwhich aims to end decades of racially discriminatory government policy, at a meeting in Toronto┬аcalled by the Chiefs of Ontario (COO) umbrella organization.

Following┬аan afternoon of impassioned debate, Ontario Regional Chief Abram Benedict called┬аthe decision a┬аdifficult and highly emotional one.

“We’re talking about one of the most important assets in our community тАФ┬аand that’s our children,” he told the delegates.┬а

The provincial advocacy group’s endorsement sets the stage for a national-level meeting next week hosted by the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) in Calgary.

There are competing draft resolutions up for consideration nationally, with one calling for First Nations┬аto support the deal, another calling for them to reject it until changes are made, and still another calling for a 90-day delay.

The T┼Эilhqot’in Nation, encompassing six communities in British Columbia, said Wednesday it doesn’t view the process as transparent or inclusive and is┬аconcerned AFN hasn’t fully included leading experts.

“The Ts╠Вilhqot’in National Government will be voting against the settlement agreement proposed by AFN,” said tribal chair Nits’il╩Фin (Chief) Joe Alphonse in a statement.

The T┼Эilhqot’in┬аurged other chiefs to vote against the deal, too.

The support was not always resounding in Ontario. Not everyone agreed the deal is the best one possible.

Several delegates expressed concerns the plan is rushed and imperfect.┬аOthers worried a snap election could yield a change in government and kill the deal but┬аchiefs resolved to press for national support next week.

The settlement pledges $47.8 billion over 10 years for long-term program reform, with no commitment beyond that period.

The deal would resolve a 17-year-old complaint at the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, first filed by AFN and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society.

Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the society, has expressed concerns about the deal and released an extensive list of proposed amendments.

The original complaint alleged Canada’s chronic underfunding of the First Nations child welfare system constituted┬аsystemic racial discrimination, an allegation the tribunal upheld in 2016.┬а

In his opening speech, Benedict said the negotiation team did its best to ensure the deal reflects the region’s realities.

Ontario First Nations are in a unique spot due to the 1965 Indian Welfare Agreement, a provincial-federal funding arrangement the tribunal ruled is discriminatory and must be reformed.

“We took your mandate and have developed a draft that we believe is the best that we can get at this time,” he┬а told delegates.

“There will never be an agreement that gets all of the areas covered. But we have gone as far as we believe [we can].”

‘We’ve heard chiefs loud and clear:’ AFN leader

COO, representing all 133 First Nations in Ontario, intervened in the case in 2009, meaning it was directly involved in the settlement talks, while other regions weren’t.

This has rankled some leaders in other regions,┬аsomething Benedict acknowledged.

“They’re pretty upset because they only found out in July what was going on,” he told the delegates.

Speaking to reporters after, Benedict said other regions are represented though AFN, which is tasked with keeping them informed.┬аAFN, an advocacy body for more than 630 First Nations, originally planned to meet last month about the deal but postponed due to chiefs’┬аconcerns.

AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak said Thursday the organization is listening and┬аworking on amendments.

“We’ve heard chiefs loud and clear,” she told reporters on Parliament Hill.

Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, speaks in the foyer of the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Thursday. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Joel Abram, grand chief of the Association of Iroquois and Allied Indians and chair of COO’s chiefs’ committee on social services, told the delegates the deal brings more money and more flexibility тАФ and more risk.

“Along with increased services comes increased responsibility, and there will be increased liability on you regardless of whether you say ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ because there will be those increased funds,” Abram said.

COO’s approval follows that of Nishnawbe Aski Nation, representing 49 First Nations in northern Ontario, which┬аvoted to ratify the deal on Wednesday, calling it a historic moment that will protect children and families for generations to come.

The human rights tribunal would also need to approve the settlement.

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