N.L. minister deflects call for inquiry into treatment of Labrador's Indigenous children - Action News
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N.L. minister deflects call for inquiry into treatment of Labrador's Indigenous children

Responding to an Innu leader's call for an inquiry into the treatment of Indigenous children in Newfoundland and Labrador, the provincial minister for Children, Seniors and Social Development says she doesn't know if it would be the best use of tax dollars.

Innu leader Simeon Tshakapesh calling for an inquiry after losing his son to suicide

Fifty-five children from Labrador are in foster care in 45 homes in the Roddickton/Englee area of the Northern Peninsula, as of late last year. (CBC)

Responding to an Innu leader's call for an inquiryinto the treatment of Indigenous children, Newfoundland and Labrador's minister for children's services says she doesn't know if an inquirywould be the best use of tax dollars.

"When it comes to the call for an inquiry, all Canadian provinces are all working together to improve child welfare services for Indigenous people, but the actualdetermination if there should be an inquiry is not for me to make," saidSherryGambin-Walsh,minister of Children, Seniors and Social Development.

When asked if she personally supports the idea of an inquiry,Gambin-Walsh said it's something she would have to study before expressing an opinion.

From the time he was a baby, Thunderheart Tshakapesh had an interest in music. He was planning to record an album this summer. (Thunderheart Tshakapesh/Facebook)

"I would really have to sit down and evaluate this in more detail. I really can't answer the question if I feel that the best use of government resources right now would be an inquiry," she said.

Last month,Innu leader Simeon Tshakapeshlost his son to suicide after ThunderheartTshakapeshreceived addiction treatment servicesin central Newfoundland.

'System has failed our youth'

Now Tshakapeshsays Gambin-Walsh'sdepartment isn't doing enough to helpLabrador's Indigenous people.

"The system has failed our youth and I certainly don't want to see parents go through what we have gone through," he said.

A man, woman and teenage girl stand in front of a river.
Simeon Tshakapesh, far right, is mourning the loss of his son, Thunderheart. The father believes his son's death was a result of being removed from home two years ago (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

Tshakapeshalso questionsthe practice of sending Indigenous children away from home for services.Hesays non-Indigenousfamilies are using Indigenous foster children to make money.

The care that our foster families are offering to children that are in need is absolutely exemplary.- SherryGambin-Walsh

"Why are they using Innu kids for revenue? Our kids are not revenue. They are not mortgage payments as people call them in Goose Bay. Our youth have been called mortgage payments and that's got to end," he said.

Gambin-Walshquestioned if any foster parents see Indigenous children as "mortgage payments."

"I've never heard that other than hearing it from Simeon. The care that our foster families are offering to children that are in need is absolutely exemplary," she said

Earlier this year, CBC News reported on the economic impact of Indigenous foster children on Northern Peninsula communities.

Minister of Children, Seniors and Social Development Sherry Gambin-Walsh says the current government has accepted recommendations to improve child protection. (Gary Locke/CBC)

The Newfoundland and Labrador government says more than 30 per cent of the children in foster care in the province that's 310 as of late 2016 are from Labrador, even though the region has only six per cent of the province's population.

Aboriginal children are vastly over-represented in the child welfare system. About one-third of the children removed from their parents wind up in foster care outside of Labrador, many hundreds of kilometres away, in non-Indigenous communities.

In many cases, the Labrador children areconcentrated in the neighbouring communities of Roddickton and Englee, home to roughly 2,000 people.

As of December, according to the provincial government, there were 45 foster homes in the area, caring for 55 children.

"It certainly helps the economy and certainly helps people that some income comes from this to help them survive and live in difficult times," said Englee MayorRudyPorter at the time.