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Edmonton

Alberta government appoints First Nation leader to child intervention panel

After facing criticism for failing to include a First Nation voice on its child intervention panel, the Alberta government has finally appointed a leader of the Siksika First Nation.

It took us a while to make sure we found the right voice

Children's Services Minister Danielle Larivee said Tyler White has connections in First Nations across Alberta and will make sure their perspectives are considered by the ministerial panel. (CBC News)

The Alberta government has appointed a First Nationleader to its child intervention panel after facing criticism for failing to doso when the panel was first struck.

"It was identified quite early that we needed to have a First Nations voice," concededChildren's Services Minister Danielle LariveeMonday, who describedthe new panel member, Tyler White, as a leader with knowledge and experience.

White is a member of the Siksika First Nation, whose reserve is just northeast of Calgary. Heis the CEO for Siksika Health Services andparticipated in Alberta's mental health review.

He was unavailable Monday for an interview and did not attend the ministerial panel meeting going on in Edmonton throughout the day. Aprovincial government spokesperson saidWhitewastied up in personal matters.

The all-party panel,launched in February, is examining ways to improve Alberta's child intervention system

The panel was struck in the wake of revelations about delays in the investigation of the death of Serenity, a four-year-old Indigenous girl who died in 2014 while in kinship care.

More than half of the 73 young people who died in government care between April 1, 2014 and Dec. 31, 2016 wereIndigenous. But only one member of the panel was Indigenous, a Mtis member.

Opposition describes appointment as overdue

"I'm going to choose the positive side of this and say it's a good thing we've added an aboriginal voice onto the panel," said RicMcIver, the Alberta PC leader in the legislaturewho hasbeen pressing for the move from the beginning of the panel's formation..

The critic for the Wildrose official Opposition, David Hanson, agreed the appointment was overdue. But it should have been made at the beginning of the panel's formation, instead of creating a misrepresentation issue at the outset, he said.

Lariveesaidthat while White can't speak for every Indigenous person, she believes his voice will bring opinions and context the panel needs to hear.

"He won't hesitate at all to make sure that the First Nations perspective is considered every step along the way," Larivee said.

But the move was described as not going far enough by some First Nationleaders who met with the panel Monday.

Freda Alook, a councillor with the Bigstone Cree Nation in northern Alberta, said every First Nationregion in Alberta should be represented instead of just one member from southern Alberta.

Freda Alook said appointing White is a good start but she believes the panel needs First Nations representation from all parts of the province. (CBC News)

"Down south is way different from up north, it's so different," Alook said. "The isolation is so different and if somebody was to come to our communities up north it's way different and you'll understand."

But Larivee said with 48 First Nations in Alberta, it would be impossible to include panel representation from each one. It was a balancefinding the right panel members to drive an effective review of the system, she said.

"It took us a while to make sure we found the right voice to be on the panel," she said.

Alberta's Minister of Indigenous Relations Richard Feehan said there willbe lots of chances for people from other communities to share their opinions.

"First Nations people have lots of opportunity to come to the commission and talk about their points of view," he said.

Panel mayhold onehearingatFirst Nation community

Albertans are being encouraged to make written and online submissions to the panel. But a spokesperson for Children's Services said taking the panel to an actual First Nation community to hold a hearing hasnot been ruled out.

On its child intervention web site, the government describesWhite as being highly respected for building relationships and praises him for hisexperiencein dealing with governments.

Besides being CEO of the Siksika health services, he is also president of a First Nations health consortium, plusa past winner of the First Nations health manageraward of excellence.

Larivee said White'sappointment will help the panel find concrete ways to make life better for the 10,000 children receiving intervention services in Alberta.