With housing, substance misuse, and poverty being key drivers for aboriginal children being overrepresented in child welfare, it really suggests that investments need to be made at two levels. One is investments in the core housing budgets of first nations communities.
In The Canadian Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect, we found aboriginal families way overrepresented in terms of overcrowding and unsafe housing--that was the perception of social workers, that they'd walk into the house and the house was not safe for children--for reliance on benefits, and substance misuse services. But we also know, for example, that we need to be cautious about just saying to ourselves, “Well, we don't need to invest in child welfare; we'll just strictly invest in the housing issue.”
I'm going to provide an example. We're very honoured right now to be working closely with the Innu Nation of Labrador. As you know, in their relocation from Davis Inlet, housing was one of the key issues that needed to be resolved. But along with it, the community was very clear that there needed to be a concordant investment in children's programs, including addiction services.
The housing investment happened and the community was relocated to much better housing, but the concordant investment in children in addictions programs did not happen. So the situation now is that we have people relocated in a community and they're still really suffering. It needs to be a “ yes and“ investment proposal.
In terms of the Kelowna accord, I can say, just as kind of an educated bystander, that I feel that it went in the right direction. We had aboriginal communities around the table feeling that this was a good first step in trying to relieve some of the housing deficits on reserve. I certainly was very encouraged to see government taking that type of progressive action, and it's really essentially required across the community. Whether it's enough or not enough, that piece I'm not too sure about.
The other thing about the laws is that we know from first nations communities, and native American communities as well, that the definitions of child maltreatment, culturally based, are very similar to those you'd find in any child maltreatment area today. Where there is a lot of difference is around neglect. Nobody disputes that a child shouldn't be physically abused or sexually abused, but neglect can be an outcome of poverty.
As I said, in many aboriginal communities, children should not be removed because they're poor. That's in keeping with the United Nations, which said that the state party's first obligation is to relieve the poverty, not to remove the child.
In terms of first nations acting under their own laws, the first example of that will be Kahnawake First Nation, where it has developed in consultation with its community its own legislation, which is about to be enacted in that community. It goes far beyond, in my experience, what is provided in provincial law, in that as a community member, under normal child welfare law, as a child protection worker I'd arrive at your door and we'd do an assessment of any risks posed to the children, and then I might suggest services to you to resolve that.
Under the Kahnawake system--and I'm very humble in describing this, because I know it's going to be an oversimplification--in their community, we'd undergo that same process: I would arrive at your door, we'd do the assessment together as a family and I might recommend some services, but before the tribal court.
The tribal court actually has the power to say to another citizen, “You know what? You have a particular gift that you can give to this family.” You might have a great garden and this family needs fresh vegetables. So you are required by the tribal court to provide that service as a citizen. If you fail to do that, you and your family will be held accountable for explaining why you were unable or unwilling to do that.
That does two things. It engages all of us in the question of child maltreatment, and we need to in this country. Sadly, today the most unsafe place for Canadian children is still in their family homes. Child protection workers can't do it alone. We have to engage Canadians in responding to child maltreatment, and Kahnawake is one example of where that's going, in that direction.