Thank you, Mr. Chairman, members of the standing committee, as well as the other witnesses. I thank you for this opportunity to present on behalf of the chiefs of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, together with Chief Arlen Dumas, Mathias Colomb First Nation.
It is good to speak with members of Parliament from all parties on this committee, and to greet you in a good way, so we can both understand the situation of Manitoba first nations.
Of the 63 first nations in Manitoba, 25 communities are considered remote and isolated. I believe you have the maps with you. Fourteen are remote and can only be reached by air or water, which means they may be accessible by winter roads only six weeks a year, as changing weather patterns are lessening the use of winter roads each year. Eleven are isolated, with some being accessible by rail, although not on a daily basis, and some by lengthy gravel roads and possibly a ferry.
Many of these first nations are not accessible for freight for two to three weeks during freeze-up in the fall and breakup in the spring.
Although in the recent past I have urged Ministers of Indian Affairs to continue the food mail program, we see that the Government of Canada is implementing the new Nutrition North Canada program. Thus, we are here today to make recommendations for improvement.
The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs supports the way in which the new program states that most nutritious, perishable foods such as fruit, vegetables, bread, fresh meat, milk, and eggs will receive the highest rate of subsidy, and we look forward to finding new ways of including commercially produced, traditional northern foods in this program.
The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs wishes to remind the standing committee members that Canada is a northern country, and that the 25 first nations in Manitoba who are remote and isolated deserve to be full participants in this new program.
We have reviewed the May 2010 announcement of this new program by the then INAC minister, the Honourable Chuck Strahl, and the present health minister, the Honourable Leona Aglukkaq, both of whom I have had the pleasure of working closely with on other initiatives. However, it causes us some concern that the announcement stated that it reinforces the Government of Canada's commitment to the northern strategy, which is focused on the Arctic. We urge this committee and this government to involve the remote and isolated communities of Manitoba in further design and implementation of this new program.
The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs recommends a fair review process to review and reinstate several first nations being cut from subsidies for nutritious food at lower cost. This process must include more communication with the first nations in Manitoba regarding what has been developed and what is anticipated to happen.
Five of our northern first nations are set to be cut from any transport subsidy program as of March 31, 2011, including two of our northernmost first nations. The first one is Barren Lands Dene Nation, which is listed as Brochet, and it's air only. Mathias Colomb Cree Nation, which is listed as Pukatawagan, gets rail freight once a week, and its satellite community is Granville Lake. The others are Opipoon NaPiwin Cree Nation, listed as South Indian Lake; Sayisi Dene First Nation, listed as Tadoule Lake, again air only; York Factory First Nation, listed as York Landing, access by road and ferry. These five first nations, which make six communities, must be able to make their case to continue to receive freight subsidies through the new Nutrition North Canada program.
Please note that the third Dene first nation, Northlands Denesuline at Lac Brochet, is on the third list of communities that will be continuing from the food mail to the Nutrition North Canada program. This makes these lists quite questionable, as the three communities are all accessible only by winter roads or air and are within about a 30-minute flight of each other.
The fair review process must also apply to the next category that will be on a watch list for 2012-13 to re-evaluate their continued subsidy access. This list includes four first nations accessible only by air: Berens River, Bloodvein, Pauingassi, and Shamattawa.
The Nutrition North Canada Advisory Board must include at least one representative from the remote and isolated first nations in Manitoba.
There must be at least one representative of the remote and isolated first nations in Manitoba included in the formal committees responsible for the monitoring and evaluation of this new program, to ensure that attention is paid to ensure that a fair review process is established to reconsider the inclusion of remote and isolated first nations in Manitoba to be involved in the Nutrition North Canada program.
We need to ensure that stores do follow-through on labelling food and goods under the Nutrition North Canada program as “subsidized” and charge at a lower price.
We need to ensure that milk prices are lowered and continue to be set at a lower price.
We need to ensure that Health Canada works with the Nutrition North Canada Advisory Board and remote and isolated first nations in Manitoba to develop the community-based, culturally appropriate nutrition education components, such as promotional materials and activities with Manitoba first nations to encourage healthy eating. These initiatives are to be incorporated into the stores receiving federal subsidies, such as exhibits, signs, handouts with recipes--for example, healthy foods diabetes prevention initiatives undertaken by Neechi Foods in inner city Winnipeg, which have received national acclaim.
We need to ensure that the Health Canada and first nations food security initiative is connected to the Nutrition North Canada program in effective ways, including the first nations in Manitoba, and that their recommendations are heeded to improve the Nutrition North Canada program.
Thank you for this opportunity of speaking with you today.
The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs is committed to working together with the Government of Canada and all partners, including the private sector, in achieving a better future.
Ekosani.
Chief Arlen Dumas has comments for this committee as well.