I really listened to the racism as it was documented by the Boyle Street representative.
I would like to thank the committee chair and members for giving me this opportunity to make a presentation on behalf of Audrey Poitras, the president of the Métis Nation of Alberta.
I commend the committee for taking on this important challenge of studying the federal contribution to reducing poverty. As I have said many times in the past, if you have no money, you have no rights, and the level of poverty correlates to the amount of prejudice and discrimination. Therefore, our objectives are clear: that the attainment of skills and academic acumen is critically important to the Métis people in this province for their well-being, their prosperity, and their citizenship.
I do want to recommend to you at this time the book The Frog Lake Reader, which was just published. It talks about the mass hanging of eight Indian leaders a week after Louis Riel was hanged. It will give you an insight into the background.
We have another presentation that we are submitting because the seven minutes doesn't give us enough time to do that. It will just put it in the context of this country, Canada, where I was born, just 65 miles east of here. I've just read it and it was so stirring that I thought I would recommend it to you.
In my remarks, I would like to tell you about the Métis people in Alberta and the Métis Nation of Alberta and share with you some information about key federal contributions to address poverty in the Métis community--education, housing, and economic development, for example--and offer some suggestions as to how the federal contributions could be strengthened and the benefits that would result.
First of all, on the background of the Alberta Métis and the Métis Nation of Alberta, Alberta has the largest Métis population in Canada. The 2006 statistics from the Alberta census reported over 85,000 people who self-identified as Métis, which includes over 5,000 Métis who live on Métis settlements. The vast majority, however, live “off-settlement”, a minority in a province with three million residents. The Métis Nation of Alberta, established in 1928, is one of the oldest Métis representative organizations in Canada.
The briefing I handed in has more in-depth background, which I would encourage you to read as it will give you a better understanding of who we are as a people in this country.
I will share with the committee some factors that contribute to Métis poverty in Alberta. There are many interacting factors that contribute to poverty in the Métis community in Alberta. For example, while the large majority of Métis live in Edmonton and Calgary, many live in rural and remote areas, especially in northern Alberta where the settlements are located.
In rural and remote areas, there is limited access to quality education, job opportunities, and medical care. Poverty is a contributing factor in the apprehension of Métis children by children's services in this province and the Métis are not identified in the Alberta legislation. We have been trying to get the province to identify the Métis children because as a Métis mother you lose the culture and you lose track of them.
Lower school achievement levels and high-school completion rates are important factors that impact future success in life, including income levels and the ability to get a good job. Lack of affordable child care and attachment to the work force affect the ability to get a good job. Lack of social and affordable housing makes a big difference.
On federal contributions to addressing poverty in the Métis communities in Alberta, I would like to focus on three key contributions that the federal government makes to alleviating poverty for Métis people in Alberta.
One: investments in post-secondary education, housing and economic development. The Métis Nation of Alberta plays an important role in delivering programs in these areas to the Métis people: the federal aboriginal skills, employment and training strategy, the new one—it looks like ASETS—and the MNA labour market development programs.
There are two major issues that the committee must deal with in our view. The first is what to do to alleviate the plight of all people who are currently in poverty, however that may be measured. The second is a long-term strategy to reduce the incidence of poverty in the Canadian population generally and in key segments of the population such as aboriginal people.
On the first point, it is very important to appreciate the importance of social programs to alleviating poverty. The Canadian government, as we know, will soon have to start dealing with its deficits. The government has already said that it will not increase taxes or cut into provincial transfers to deal with the deficit. This means that the Government of Canada will be looking to cut its program budgets.
Since aboriginal programs are funded almost entirely by the federal government, they are very vulnerable to eventual cutbacks. We state very strongly that the federal deficit must not be paid for on the backs of aboriginal Canadians.
On the second point, the surest way out of poverty is a decent job. To get a decent job means to get an education. To paraphrase a former prime minister—I don't know which one it is—the best social program is a good job.
Now, the MNA is very appreciative that the federal government introduced the aboriginal human resources development strategy, which has enabled us since 1996 to fund training programs to assist our people in finding jobs. Since 1999, over 6,000 Métis in Alberta have found jobs through the MNA's labour market programs.
However, the committee must realize that MNA and other agreement-holders have been operating labour market programs at basically the same level of funding for over a decade. With a youthful population, the number of clients has increased, and the recession is only now compounding this problem, while tuition fees and costs associated with education have climbed since that time. Yet year after year, we operate with budgets that do not increase.
Once again, funding to agreement-holders under the new ASET strategy will remain static. Our budgets will remain the same for another five years. What funding increases there will be will be diverted to the federal bureaucracy, not to the organizations such as the MNA that provide service on the ground.
There are limits to what we can do under the federal program. We know that our high-school dropout rate is very high among our young people. It exceeds 40%. For aboriginal people, and Métis in particular, the most successful programs are run not by federal or provincial bureaucrats but by our own people and our own government and community organizations.
Yet there is a very strong inclination on the part of federal and provincial bureaucracies to want to control the show and manage and deliver aboriginal programs directly. You would think that with all the talk of self-government and devolution, this would not be the case. However, there is a great disconnect between the rhetoric used by the government and actions on the ground by government officials.
As long as aboriginal people--and the poor generally, for that matter--have their lives controlled by officials and their program rules and regulations, we will never move beyond dependency.
On federal housing programs and the MNA housing initiatives, the Government of Canada homelessness partnering strategy provides housing dollars to assist the aboriginal off-reserve population. The percentage of homeless aboriginal people shockingly outweighs that of other Canadians; in Alberta, this funding helped to battle the affordable housing shortages for aboriginal people.
This year marks the final year of funding specifically addressed to aboriginal housing. We understand that Alberta municipalities continue to receive funding to address homelessness. Métis Capital Housing is working closely with the City of Edmonton on the Boyle Renaissance project, which will eventually provide housing for 900 homeless and at-risk people who frequent the inner city. We also hope to be able to manage 70 seniors' units and 30 handicapped units in this project.
Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel has also used federal funding to partner with Métis Capital Housing in the Cornerstone project. The City of Edmonton provided approximately $2.5 million in assistance, with federal support, to purchase land to construct a fourplex providing 12 units under the emergency housing transition program.
The Métis Nation of Alberta would like to see the federal government restore housing dollars to assist aboriginal people in Alberta to retain, repair, and increase the number of affordable housing units for our people.
Just quickly, in closing, I'll turn to federal economic development and the MNA's industrial relations unit. Government and industry must support Métis economic development in every way possible to truly reduce poverty in this country. There must be support not only to address the challenges Métis individuals face in accessing affordable capital and business development, employment, and skills training, but also to address how Métis governments can participate in major projects and create our own-source revenues through for-profit ventures.
However positive this may look, it's only half of the equation. There needs to be support for these initiatives by the government and industry if they are to be successful.
The MNA is working to improve the social and economic position of its citizens and the time has come for government and industry to step up and do their part in making Métis people full and meaningful partners in the Canadian economy. As it stands right now, the economic potential of the Métis in the province is not being maximized. The MNA is looking to government and industry to partner with us to close this gap.
In closing, I again wish to thank the committee for listening to my words. I hope it will take them into account as it goes forward in making the important decisions that will have a meaningful impact on the lives of Métis people who are struggling to overcome poverty and build a better life for their children and their grandchildren.
Thank you.