Well, thank you.
[Witness spoke in Anishinaabemowin as follows:]
Aneen, Boozooh, Apiichi-gii-chii-nay-dum Akiinaah o-gii-bii-izah-iing omahh noo-gomI.
Chi-meegwetch.
[English]
Good morning.
For those of you who don't know me, my name is Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak. I'm the national chief for the Assembly of First Nations.
I'd like to acknowledge that we are gathered here in the traditional territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe nation.
Thank you to the committee for the invitation to appear today on this critical study of Bill C-15. We are pleased to support the Assembly of First Nations' technical brief in response to this omnibus budget implementation act, which includes comments on part 5, divisions 1, 3, 5, 32, 33, 35 and 44.
November's federal budget was an opportunity to demonstrate, through deeds—as we recall, at the opening of Parliament, King Charles was here and he said through deeds—that first nations voices matter to this new administration. In the lead-up to the budget, when asked about reports of first nations budget cuts, Canada reassured chiefs that they understood more needed to be done and not less.
Sadly, that promise was broken, and the 2025 federal budget represents a significant setback. When the best we can say is that indigenous services are only being cut by $2 billion to $3 billion, we know there is a problem, especially when provincial transfers across this country for health, education and social services increased by 5%. Those increases never hit first nations. They never think of us.
Instead of closing gaps between first nations and Canadians, this budget makes things more difficult.
To start, we highlight examples of sunsetting programs that are not being renewed in this budget: the Indian residential schools resolution health support program, for one; the Indian day schools health and cultural support program; mental wellness teams and opioid treatment support; also support for vulnerable first nations children accessing Jordan's principle; and over 300 first nations adult education programs.
No matter how you look at it, less is not more.
These sunsetting programs must be extended. First nations have been told to be patient. Another plan has been promised—just trust us. We sit here today, six weeks from the expiration of these vital programs, and we see no plan before us. Now first nations are demanding answers.
Looking at what is being implemented in the omnibus bill, we are equally concerned. As an example, part 5, division 1, raises many red flags. This looks like an end run around statutory safeguards this Parliament established to address concerns about cabinet's unchecked power in Bill C-5. All Canadian laws, including their final content and process of development, must be compliant with section 5 of Canada's United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. Despite Canada's claim that free, prior and informed consent were at the heart of that bill, these vital references remain absent in this legislation.
In the case of this bill's Red Tape Reduction Act, we have concluded that excluding first nations from the development of this law is likely to result in strong legal challenges.
Another concern we have with this act is a strong trend towards devolution of federal authority. While first nations are clearly within federal jurisdiction, Canada continues to delegate authority and fiscal responsibility to provinces through program design and funding flows. In addition to eroding federal accountability and fragmenting service delivery, this approach is fundamentally inconsistent with nation-to-nation relationships. Devolution of federal authority goes against the principles of substantive equality and unfairly forces first nations to compete with provinces for health, education and police funding.
Build Canada Homes, for instance, is a recent example of a federal initiative that could deliver for first nations through a distinctions-based funding approach. In light of this, I appreciate Minister Robertson's verbal commitment to set aside a minimum funding of 10% to finally start addressing the first nations housing gap. I do ask the minister to have that in writing with first nations because if not, we get left out.
We also recommend that Bill C-15 go further and mandate distinctions-based program design and first nations participation in governance.
Finally, it is worth noting that November's budget was introduced on the one-year anniversary of the passing of one of our great first nations leaders, Justice Murray Sinclair. After documenting the truths of Canada's horrific residential school system, Justice Sinclair called on us to get up and do the work of reconciliation. He described the mountain we needed to climb. He showed us the path to the top, but he also said that it was up to all of us to do the climbing. That climb rests with all of us now—everyone in this room, on this committee. In Justice Sinclair's name, we must keep imagining what a world looks like where all of us have medicines, food and a safe place to live—not just a few of us, but truly all of us. Budgets are not just accounting exercises—these are lives.
There are important instruments as well for governments to deliver on their obligations to protect the rights of all citizens. We hope that you listen and respond through both words and deeds, as the King said when he opened Parliament. I look forward to seeing him later this year, and I want to tell him that we're working together and finding progress.
We look forward to your questions. Meegwetch.