[Witness speaks in Hul'q'umi'num' ]
I give thanks to each and every one of you for the opportunity to be here today to address, and to learn from one another, and to take the time to talk about what's important with respect to ASETS agreement holders.
I need to apologize. I guess I wasn't ready. We're not really too familiar with this process, and I don't have a document to read from. But nonetheless I can speak to our experiences, acknowledge the ancestors of the land that we are on today, and acknowledge each of our ancestors who allow us to be who we are as a people.
I'm an elected chief. I'm from one of 19 nations that are part of Coast Salish Employment and Training Society of Vancouver Island in British Columbia. We do work together with each other through a board of directors that oversees the ASETS agreement itself with government. We are servicing on and off reserve in our geographical area. We do have three friendship centres that are in our territories that we are serving. I know that there's a document that's been handed in with respect to a report going forward, but I just wanted to speak to some of the issues and challenges that we have.
I don't know if this is the right table or not, but I wanted to raise a level of concern. When we moved from what was called the Aboriginal Human Resource Development Agreement, the AHRDA to ASETS, in the AHRDA itself, we were given an extension and another extension. That created a lot of chaos for the working leadership and the society itself. How do you plan to talk about the initiatives or the struggles that we're all facing with respect to lack of education, lack of understanding, and how do you plan when you're just given an extension of six months or a year?
We were told there was going to be a crosswalk of time. There wasn't a crosswalk of time. We were learning how to behave on one side of the street, we were told there was a crosswalk and here's how we're going to behave with the ASETS agreements. There was no transition for that. You know what? It's a totally different side of the street. The behaviours are different, and yet we're being held accountable with transparency. I don't think we have an issue with that. We're being financially audited. I don't think we have an issue with that. We have our program officer doing file reviews inside our offices. They're looking into our subagreements. All of the words around accountability, our nations are standing up to.
But I think when it comes down to it, it's the lack of funding for support services in our communities. When we're struggling with the timeframes and all of these other things coming at us through the ASETS agreements, it goes to the question. I hear the word about the growth in our communities and that is what we're struggling with today. Our funding hasn't increased. Our child care is increasing; our child care funding hasn't increased. The subsidies in the province in our geographical areas that support our children are struggling. I know that maybe that's not for this table, but I think that you have to take into perspective that our nations are struggling, and we're struggling to get ourselves licensed and to meet the standards that are required for Canada and the province. I just wanted to make mention of those.
I also want to mention some of our allocation for EI because we do the consolidated revenue funds in the EI. Most recently in the last couple of years, we haven't been receiving the EI part 2 revenues to the ASETS agreement or the AHRDA holders. It's our understanding that the EI part 2 revenues are going to the employment and assistance services in our local municipal governments. Yet we're asked to meet the targets on reserve or off reserve for our clientele inside the ASETS agreement. It's my understanding that the targets within the EAS offices are not being met. They are supposed to be meeting a number of first nations clients a year. That's not being met. We don't see those audited financial statements. We don't see the data entry on those reports.
There's a bit of friction going on. You see the first nations saying, “Those are our dollars. Why aren't you accountable to our first nations? Why are you pushing our clients back towards us?” There needs to be a mechanism for us to actually sit down and talk about a plan that services first nations with those dollars.
We're not at that table, and I don't know where that table is. It's very difficult when we're trying to service first nations off reserve and that isn't an opportunity for us.
The other part of it, too, is that when we talk about essential skills for employment and about feeling self-pride and self-identity, we're told by our program officer that we're not allowed to have our culture or our language incorporated into some of the training or to have a stand-alone program. But when we spend a lot of time and energy looking at what essential skills and employment opportunities are, what do those look like? I think numeracy, literacy, and all of those things are very important. But when you look at where we come from as a people, it's also important to know the language and to have the elders incorporated.
It doesn't mean just culturally. We need to bridge the cultural gap to mainstream society. A lot of our people might figure there's discrimination on the work site when somebody's up there yelling, “Throw these down and get me that cord.” Some people do feel...but that's the language, and that's the culture on the construction site. We don't have enough of those mechanisms in place to have that cross-cultural bridge to some of our success stories, and I think that's why we might fall through some of the cracks.
On population growth, when we talk about the demographics of how our community is growing and the growth, I feel like we're competing with the provincial growth as well because of the immigrants. A lot of people are coming in. We're struggling that way. How do we fight with mainstream society to get meaningful career jobs, not band-aid jobs?
I'm trying to speak really quickly here. I'm very conscious of the time. I just want to mention that we want meaningful employment. We want what's right. In our communities, we're trying to define what success is when you have suicides, drinking and drugs, health issues, a lack of housing, and poverty. When we define success through our guiding principles, as nations we're somewhat forced to try to understand provincial success and federal success and what true partnership means through the ASETS agreement. It doesn't necessarily jibe sometimes. We need to have some flexibility in how we're going to work together and what that's going to look like. Again, maybe it's just a matter of creating that table that allows us to do what we need to do, on behalf of all us. I think once one of us feels good, we're all going to feel good.
I think the other part of it is that when you start moving dollars from one table to another, it's.... I talk about the active measures in our communities. Those were moved from our agreement holders over to education. First nations seemed to be at each other with respect to where those dollars were going. We want those dollars back. It makes it difficult for our own leadership to sit down and have meaningful dialogue around that.
And yet, as I say, I love the idea of tracking our children from elementary school to middle school to high school. Our children aren't being assessed, I don't think, properly in grade 1 to grade 6 to grade 9. I'd like to take a look at those assessments. I know it's provincial standards that do the testing.
One of the things we're worried about is that the SA—social assistance—recipients lineup is getting longer. How do we help that? The other part of it is that if they're not on SA, you know what, they're in our federal and our provincial court systems, and those lineups are getting longer. Those are the things that we're seeing in our communities. We're trying to work with all of you to make sure those needs are being met. Some of the communities are feeling good about what we're supposed to be doing.