Canadian indigenous group takes charge of child welfare services
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[July 07, 2021]
By Shannon VanRaes
COWESSESS FIRST NATION, Saskatchewan
(Reuters) -The Canadian indigenous group that announced last month the
discovery of an estimated 751 unmarked graves near a former residential
school said on Tuesday it would take charge of its own child welfare
services under an agreement with the federal government.
The accord, unveiled at an event in the western Canadian province of
Saskatchewan attended by Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme, Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, marks the
first time in 70 years the community will have control over child and
family services among its members.
It is the first such agreement under a 2019 law meant to give indigenous
groups more control over child welfare in their communities and reduce
the overrepresentation of indigenous children in foster care. Cowessess
First Nation passed an act intended to do that in March 2020.
"Our goal is one day there will be no children in care," Delorme told
the event, adding: "We have a lot of work to do."
Trudeau said his government is in talks with other First Nations on
similar agreements. Government spokespeople did not confirm whether
Ottawa would continue to fund the First Nation's child and family
services costs going forward.
Canada has for decades disproportionately separated indigenous children
from their families to place them in foster care - sometimes because
services they needed were underfunded on reserves.
In Saskatchewan, 80% of children in foster care are Indigenous,
according to a 2018 report.
Canada is reeling from the discoveries of more than 1,000 unmarked
graves at the sites of former residential schools, many of them believed
to be children. They are a grim reminder of the abuses indigenous
communities have suffered for generations and their fight for justice.
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visits the Cowessess First
Nation, where a search had found 751 unmarked graves from the former
Marieval Indian Residential School near Grayson, Saskatchewan,
Canada July 6, 2021. REUTERS/Shannon VanRaes
For 165 years and as recently as 1996, Canada's residential school
system separated children from their families and sent them to boarding
schools where they were malnourished, beaten and sexually abused in what
the country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission called "cultural
genocide" in 2015.
The federal government was in court last month
fighting a Human Rights Tribunal ruling that would have made Ottawa
individually compensate children and families harmed by what the
government admits is a discriminatory child and family services
system. A federal court ruling is pending.
Tuesday's announcement may not improve things for Cowessess children
if the circumstance of their families' lives do not change as well,
said Cindy Blackstock, a member of Gitxsan First Nation and
executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring
Society, which is taking the government to court over the system.
That would require better funding for services such as housing, she
said.
"We know from the research that the closer (to the First Nation) the
control is for children's services, the better the outcomes
ultimately are for children. So that's positive," she said.
(Additional reporting and writing by by Anna Mehler Paperny in
Toronto; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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