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Canada

Half of First Nations children live in poverty

Half of status First Nations children in Canada live in poverty, a troubling figure that jumps to nearly two-thirds in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, says a newly released report.

Rate rises above 60% in Saskatchewan, Manitoba

Aboriginal peoples are a growing percentage of Canada's population, but the poverty rate for children is being called 'staggering.' (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Half of status First Nations children in Canada live in poverty, a troubling figure that jumps to nearly two-thirds in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, says a newly released report.

"The poverty rate is staggering. A 50 per cent poverty rate is unlike any other poverty rate for any other disadvantaged group in the country, by a long shot the worst," said David Macdonald, a senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and co-author of the report.

The study released late Tuesday bythe Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and Save the Children Canada found that the poverty rate of status First Nations children living on reserves was triple that of non-indigenous children.

In Manitoba and Saskatchewan, 62 and 64 per cent of status First Nations children wereliving below the poverty line, comparedwith 15 and 16 per cent among non-indigenous children in the provinces.

Poverty rates amongstatusFirst Nationschildren are consistently higher across the country.

Co-author Daniel Wilson cautions thatfor many of them, "the depth of the poverty is actually greater than the numbers themselves tell you."

"Imagine any typical First Nations child living on a reserve," said Wilson, a former diplomat and policy consultant on indigenous issues. "They're wakingup in an overcrowded home that may have asbestos, probably has mould, is likely in need of major repair,that does not have drinking water and they have no school to go to."

The study is based on the 2006 census, the most recent data to provide a detailed portrait of poverty among all Canadians, at least until more of the 2011 census is released. The annual survey of labour and income dynamics typically used to assess poverty rates excludes those living on reserves.

The report notes thaton-reserve First Nations children who are under federaljurisdiction fare far worse comparedwithindigenous children Mtis, Inuit and non-status First Nations under provincial jurisdiction. For the latter group, the rate of poverty was 27 per cent,twice that of their non-indigenous counterparts.

That figure aligns closelywith the poverty rateexperienced byfirst-generationimmigrant and refugee children, which sits at 33 per cent, as well as by visible minorities, which is at 22 per cent.

"Some of these differences in child poverty appear to be a matter of jurisdiction," the report notes.

Provinces provide social services to Mtis, Inuit and non-reserve First Nations, while Ottawa is responsible for funding social services on reserves.

Funding outpaced by population growth

But as the report notes,transfer payments from the federal government to reserveshave been capped ata two per cent increase since 1996, making no allowances for the growth of population or needs.

"So if you have larger levels of poverty than you did in 1996, there's no way for you to change the income supplement structure," said Macdonald. "It's a major constraint in terms of actually trying to deal with some of these issues."

Persistent disadvantages faced by Canada's aboriginal peoplesin regard to education, employment, health and housing are well-documented, but thereport suggests that thestaggeringpoverty faced by indigenous children is preventable.

Lifting all the indigenous children upto the poverty line wouldcost $1 billion, while $580 million of that would suffice for 120,000 status First Nations alone, the study says.

"This is a situation that is developing. It has yet to be fully developed, so you've got kids that are going through very high levels of poverty, but if we take action now, these are things that could be rectified," said Macdonald.

Save the Children Canada's spokeswoman Cicely McWilliam said the organization became interested in studying poverty among indigenous children in Canada because it is currently building programs to work with the communities.

"Save the Children generally speaking works with the most marginalized wherever we work, the kids who need the most help," said McWilliam.

Currently underway are three programs:

  • Helping parents establish better bonds with infants, something that has been weakened by residential schools.
  • Helping reclaim traditional languages that areincreasingly being forgotten.
  • Apeer-based model to combat high rates ofsuicide.

For now, most of the work is being done with the Kenora Chiefs Advisory, whichrepresents seven communities in northernOntario.

"We're in the building phase for all of these and we hope to have national programming both for development and for emergencies in the future," said McWilliam.

About 426,000 indigenous children live in Canada, with most residing in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Alberta, B.C. and Ontario. The indigenous population is one of the fastest growing in Canada.