Good morning, Mr. Chair and distinguished members of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.
I wish to acknowledge the traditional lands of the Algonquin Nation upon which we are meeting today. And I want to thank you and the committee for the opportunity to present to you on Canada's upcoming 150th birthday in 2017 on behalf of my organization. I'll talk a little bit about that first.
I'm Jeff Cyr. I'm a Métis from the Métis Nation in Manitoba. I'm executive director of the National Association of Friendship Centres. This is my first official presentation to your committee in my capacity as the executive director. My president sends her regrets. She's off to another event here in town.
The National Association of Friendship Centres comprises 119 urban, community-based, aboriginal-controlled service organizations from coast to coast to coast in Canada. They are assisted in their work by six provincial and territorial associations, and of course, by our national office here in Ottawa.
The early history of the friendship centre movement is found in the cities of Toronto, Winnipeg, and Vancouver, starting in the 1950s. The history and evolution of the friendship centre movement has been one of continual focus on meeting the health, social, economic, educational, employment, cultural, language, and transitional needs of first nations, Métis, and Inuit people in urban centres in our country.
Friendship centres do not just provide invaluable services to the urban aboriginal people who utilize the programs. The movement also provides employment opportunities at the local, regional, and national levels. Combined, the movement employs over 2,600 people, of which 72% are women.
The overall purpose of friendship centres in Canada is to improve the life chances of and the opportunities for the urban aboriginal population in our country. Our continuum of services includes prenatal programming, healthy babies, the head start program, youth programming, mental health and wellness, lifelong care, diabetes clinics, and drug and alcohol prevention, all of which are vital programs that help to address the spiralling cost of healthcare in Canada.
We also provide education-related programming, which includes literacy, alternative high schools, and of course, the previously mentioned head start program for young children. Friendship centres also provide employment and training programs, coupled with economic development support services, which help urban aboriginal people establish secure futures for their families.
While friendship centres have had long-term success in offering and delivering these vital services, we confront many challenges. Some are demographic realities. Others pertain to organization and human and fiscal capacity.
The urban aboriginal population in Canada continues to increase. In 1996, it was 47%. In 2001, it was 49%. In 2006, it was 54%. We anticipate that it's close to 60% today. As well, our population is young: 48% of the population is under the age of 25. These demographic realities place strong pressures on the human and fiscal capacities of our centres, especially in light of the fact that federal core funding of the aboriginal friendship centres program has been frozen at $16 million since 1989.
Throughout our history, friendship centres have been places of social innovation that have required employees to be creative in finding resources to meet the full scope of needs among urban aboriginal peoples. Friendship centres generally turn five cents of federal funding into $1 of services by seeking and securing funding from other sources. Friendship centres in our provincial and territorial organizations also have productive and well-established relationships with municipal, provincial, and territorial governments. These relationships provide additional funding, which is utilized to offer the cadre of programs and services I mentioned earlier.
The national association has fostered strong relationships with the federal government. We have worked on various issues with the Public Health Agency, Health Canada, Corrections Canada, the RCMP, HRSDC, Statistics Canada, and Parliament, through the all-party friendship centre caucus, which is co-chaired by Jean Crowder and Chris Warkentin.
The national association is also fostering strong relationships with several universities in Canada through our Urban Aboriginal Knowledge Network. Our relationship with these universities is central to a research proposal we have submitted to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. We hosted a very successful national health conference in February of this year.
We are also working hand in hand with the Office of the Federal Interlocutor.
As you see, the friendship centre movement is busy in Canada. I've not highlighted our international work and efforts. We are very busy, and we need to be. The urban aboriginal population is dynamic: it's growing, and it's young.
Priorities for the movement include health, employment, training, youth programming, economic development, the social economy, crime prevention, creating safe communities, protecting first nations, Métis, and Inuit heritages in urban environments, and protecting Mother Earth.
In 2017 Canada will be celebrating its 150th birthday, and you have asked us here today to provide you with our thoughts regarding this.
I'm sure you are prepared to hear from us and from other aboriginal organizations that the history and relationships with first nations, the Métis Nation, and Inuit have not always been positive and that we are all trying to find ways to reconcile these relationships. Indeed, the apology delivered by the Prime Minister and other federal party leaders in 2008 was a huge step in the right direction. Canada's endorsement of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples last year was a strong second step, and tonight I will be attending an event hosted by the NDP in honour of the declaration.
Canada cannot divest itself of the roles and place that aboriginal peoples have played in the history of this country. Simply, the name Canada itself is an aboriginal word, as are many other places and names in this country, including Ottawa, Quebec, and Manitoba. Therefore, any celebration of Canada's birthday, including its upcoming 150th, must be inclusive of our rich cultures, traditions, and societies.
As John Ralston Saul states in his book A Fair Country: Telling Truths about Canada, Canada is a country heavily influenced and shaped by aboriginal peoples.
I would even advance for your consideration that the pre-history of Canada be included as an integral part of upcoming celebrations. Recently I have been reading the book 1491, a book that I feel accurately reflects and describes the richness of aboriginal cultures and societies prior to first contact. This book describes the deep and thriving aboriginal societies that existed prior to contact, with aboriginal populations that were very large—much larger than we have in today's Canada.
We would suggest that, leading up to 2017, serious efforts be made to support the reconciliation that is occurring in our country. Bridges of understanding and mutual respect need to be built between Canadians and the indigenous peoples of these lands.
In my opening I acknowledged the land we are on and upon which Parliament sits, as those are the traditional lands of the Algonquin Nation. I do this not just as a passing message, but as one who recognizes the many-centuries-old care of these lands by indigenous peoples.
As we move towards 2017, the NAFC and our member friendship centres are willing and able partners in commemoration activities in support of Canada's 150th anniversary. Friendship centres are vibrant community spaces that support cross-cultural education and offer opportunities for dialogue between Canadians and aboriginal peoples, to come together to listen, learn, and share in a spirit of friendship and respect.
Let us together set reconciliation as a strong goal to be achieved by 2017. Let us sit together to set the agenda and work plan for this, and let us both play vital roles in achieving this. If we work together on this, I know we can make significant steps to advance this among all of our populations. It is for the better of Canada and it's for the better of all our citizens and nations.
Thank you for your kind attention. Meegwetch.