Thank you.
Good morning, everyone, and thanks for the invitation.
I'd like to first acknowledge the Squamish, Musqueam, and Tsleil-Waututh nations, on whose traditional territory we're meeting.
My Nisga'a name is Luugiyoo, of the House of Daxaan, Village of Gingolx. I'm the chair of the Aboriginal Homeless Steering Committee for metro Vancouver and president of the National Aboriginal Housing Association.
On behalf of AHSC and NAHA, I'd like to thank the committee for listening to aboriginal Canadians about the challenges that we face in trying to reduce and ultimately eliminate poverty across this country.
However, the time has come to act. This issue has been studied to death for decades. You yourselves have listened to hundreds of hours of expert and community testimony this year and last and have accessed dozens if not hundreds of studies on poverty. So now is the time for action. Your job is a big one, and we are counting on each and every member of this committee to advocate for legislation to eliminate poverty in this country, especially within the aboriginal community, where it is estimated that almost 50 percent of aboriginal children live in poverty.
Poverty, like homelessness, is created by people and it can be solved by people. It will take governments at all levels working with civil society to move this issue onto the public policy agenda and forge the necessary political will to eradicate poverty.
I want to say things that will be useful, but in the back of my mind I'm suspicious of this government, based on its record, especially given that the Canadian government voted against the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People on Thursday, September 13, 2007. When this government voted against this declaration, they voted against aboriginal people in this country. So what am I to think?
I'm sure you've heard that over 150,000 children live in poverty in B.C. This is 13%, the highest percentage of any province. And for the sixth year in a row, it is higher than the national average, which is 9.5% . There are almost 700,000 children living in poverty right now, right here in this country. Children under 18 make up 37% of food bank users. One in four first nations children live in poverty. Nearly half of off-reserve first nations children under the age of six live in low-income families, compared with 18% of non-aboriginal children.
As an architect, I am frustrated working in first nations communities where sometimes 70% of the people living in the community are on social assistance. And the federal government is trying to push home-ownership in these communities. These communities are under-resourced. As a housing advocate, what do I tell a father with three kids living in a shelter that there are no apartments available at the end of the 30-day stay?
There is a lack of affordable housing being built. How is it in this country, this province, and this city that our one temporary adult aboriginal homeless shelter is at capacity every night, turning away dozens back onto the street? The aboriginal community does not have the same access to capital resources as the non-aboriginal community. However, on the program services side last year the AHSC members provided over 50,000 shelter-bed stays, over 40,000 meals, served 2,000 families at food banks, and provided over 9,000 people with services that helped to keep them off the streets.
Not that I'm an advocate for international agencies, but Canada is listed as one of the most livable countries on the UN Human Development Index—it moved from sixth to fourth this year. Yet there are 450 food banks in this country and aboriginal homelessness is increasing. For example, there was a 34% increase between 2005 and our latest count in metro Vancouver in 2008. This increase was attributed to rising unemployment, lack of affordable housing, lack of a living wage, and inadequate social assistance policies in this province.
You want to know what to do about poverty. You really want to know? I say do your job. Act like a federal government. Conduct business like a nation concerned for its citizens. Act on the Prime Minister's apology to residential school survivors. Enact legislation for an aboriginal poverty reduction strategy.
There are over 150,000 non-profit organizations doing the job of government in this country. Why? Stop offloading jurisdiction to the provinces and territories. Otherwise we are just handing down to our grandchildren the problems created by federal policies and lack of federal investment.
In the aboriginal community, for example, there are high incidences of adult incarceration: 79% in Saskatchewan and 71% in Manitoba; women incarcerated: 87% in Saskatchewan, 83% in Manitoba and Yukon; aboriginal youth in secure custody: 31%; aboriginal homelessness: 35% in B.C.; domestic violence: 33%; lack of high school education for aboriginal people: 43%; lack of university degrees: 6% for aboriginal people compared to 26% for non-aboriginal people; and 40% of foster children are aboriginal, with a high in Manitoba of 68%, plus similar statistics within the aboriginal community across this country for addictions, unemployment, illiteracy, and HIV/AIDS.
An aboriginal poverty reduction strategy needs to be comprehensive. It also needs to reflect reality to include services and supports on and off reserve. Such an aboriginal strategy needs to address input by aboriginal people into the design, structure, and operations of the national strategy; affordable and adequate housing designed culturally appropriately; income security and financial transfers, meaning a liveable wage and support for workers. In 2004 only 38% of unemployed Canadians were able to access EI, meaning 62% weren't.
On education and training, accessibility is an issue in the aboriginal community.
On child care, more funded spaces are needed.
On employment opportunities: financial transfers directly to communities based on community priorities on a needs basis; appointment of a cabinet minister committed to reducing aboriginal poverty across this country and not just housed within Indian affairs, as it isn't set up to address all the dimensions of aboriginal people; provinces and territories mandated to have their own aboriginal poverty reduction strategy that fits their jurisdiction.
B.C. must implement a legislative poverty reduction plan that includes the appointment of a cabinet minister committed to reducing poverty in this province. The aboriginal poverty reduction strategy should have a target of reducing the number of children living in poverty—I know you know this number—by 25% over five years, renewable on a five-year basis over 20 years.
In closing, I'd like to read a quote by Robert Rainer, the executive director of Canada Without Poverty. He wrote:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms both provide for the rights of “life, liberty and security of the person.” But people in poverty, in general, have shorter lives, less liberty and less security of their person than their wealthier counterparts. Thus we can see how by preventing poverty, the health of millions of Canadians can be improved, the lives of many of them lengthened accordingly, and thus their right to “life” (as well their rights to liberty and security of the person) better supported. Moreover, by seizing poverty as a human rights issue and combating it more effectively, governments in concert with civil society will help reduce health care system costs. This is part of the transformative opportunity for Canada if fighting poverty is central to the public policy agenda.
[Witness speaks in his native language]
Thank you.