Assembly of First Nations national chief calls for action following reports on housing, policing - Action News
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Assembly of First Nations national chief calls for action following reports on housing, policing

The Assembly of First Nations national chief is calling for action from the federal government following two reportsfrom the Auditor General released Tuesday showing continued shortcomings in Indigenous housing and policing.

Cindy WoodhouseNepinak says Auditor General's reports 'provide a clear path forward'

A woman raises her hand during a speech.
Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak speaks during the Special Chiefs Assembly in Ottawa in December. She is calling for action following two Auditor General's reports released this week. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

The Assembly of First Nations national chief is calling for action from the federal government following two reportsfrom the Auditor General released Tuesday showing continued shortcomings in Indigenous housing and policing.

The report on housing in First Nations communitiesreferred to 2021 Census data showing thatpeople in First Nations communities are four times more likely to live in crowded housing and six times more likely to live in housing in need of major repair than non-Indigenous people.

"These reports provide a clear path forward for the changes urgently needed," said Cindy WoodhouseNepinak.

The report, whichfocused on on-reserve housingin the provinces,says there has been no meaningful improvement since 2015 inhousing conditions. It cited a 2021 Assembly of First Nations report that estimated more than 55,000 new units were needed and 81,000 units need repairs.

In 2019, the Trudeau government pledged to close thehousing gap in First Nations communities by 2030, but the report says Indigenous Services Canada and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation are not on track to support First Nations to meet this goal.

WoodhouseNepinak said she thinks the government is falling short of the 2030 deadline.

"The housing crisis and infrastructure gap in our communities is a main driver of [First Nations] homelessness," she said.

Jamie-lee Wesley and her husband recently moved back to her home community of Gitsegukla First Nation, about 700kilometres north of Vancouver, for her husband's job.

The couple is livingwith her parents.

"It's not the best situation, but it could be worse," said Wesley, who is Gitxsan and Tsimshian.

WATCH | Report shows current approach on First Nations housing doesn't work:

Feds need 'fundamentally' different approach to Indigenous housing, AG says

6 months ago
Duration 1:02
Auditor General Karen Hogan says two decades of data shows the current approach to housing in First Nations communities isn't working. A new report - the AG's fourth on this issue since 2003 - shows many of the concerns flagged about Indigenous housing persist.

She saidshe is happy to be home but living in her parents' five-bedroom house with six people can get tricky,and other siblings sometimes come and stay as well.

"We're just trying to find other options, but being in such a rural part of B.C., it's kind of sparse," said Wesley.

Wesley saida housing waitlist with her First Nation is long and she hasn't been able to get an application.

Money going unspent in policing

Another Auditor General report was critical of the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program a cost-sharedprogram between the federal and provincial and territorial governments created in 1991, meant to improve the safety of First Nations and Inuit communities.

The report found that Public Safety Canada, the federal department overseeing the program, "did not work in partnership with Indigenous communities to provide" policing services tailored to their needs. The report said the RCMP can't fully staff the positions for which it receives funding under the program's agreements, leaving First Nations and Inuit communities underserved.

The report also found that $13 million in program funds for the 2022-23 fiscal year went unspent and that Public Safety Canada was "at risk" of not disbursing over $45 million in funds for the 2023-2024 fiscal year.

"By not fulfilling some of their responsibilities under the program, Public Safety Canada's and the RCMP's actions are not aligned with building trust with First Nations and Inuit communities and with the federal government's commitment to truth and reconciliation," Auditor General Karen Hogansaid in a statement.

WoodhouseNepinaksaid the current model isn't working.

"Reform of First Nations policing is essential to ensure public safety and First Nations communities which are suffering under the current funding formula," she said.

Unspent money from the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program should be distributed to self-administered First Nations police forces, said Edward Lennard Busch, executive director of the First Nations Chiefs of Police Association.

Busch isa member of the Kahkewistahaw First Nation in Saskatchewan, and aformer chief of police for the File Hills First Nation Police Service.

"It is kind of disappointing to see all that money go unspent when there is so much need in other places," said Busch.

Busch said often money allocated through federal programs is for particular purposes, like RCMP positions in communities, and then piles up if those positions aren't filled.

"We all have the same goal," he said.

"We really want to have the best policing services that we can offer to our communities."