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Human Rights

PSAC Statement on National Aboriginal Peoples' Day

June 21, 2008


Making Aboriginal Poverty History

PSAC Fact Sheet
National Aboriginal Peoples' Day, June 21, 2008

Too many Aboriginal people live in poverty in Canada. The statistics speak for themselves:

Aboriginal poverty occurs within the context of poverty in Canada overall. Adjusted for inflation, many provincial welfare rates are now lower than they were in 1986. Low-wage, non-unionized jobs don't pay much more than social assistance, leaving thousands of families – both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal – struggling below the poverty line.

Housing crisis

While the housing situation on First Nations reserves is especially problematic, the situation is not much better in the rest of the country, leaving many urban Aboriginal people with insecure living situations. The lack of affordable housing in Canada led Miloon Kothari, the UN Special Rapporteur on adequate housing, to declare homelessness a “national emergency.” The National Homelessness Secretariat has suggested that there might be 150,000 homeless people in Canada, although experts and academic institutions have suggested that the actual number of homeless people may be at least double that amount.

In the North, Inuit homelessness is an invisible problem, because harsh weather conditions mean that people can't sleep on the street. But according to a 2007 study by the Quilliit Nunavut Status of Women Council, this invisibility masks the fact that Inuit people are living in overcrowded or inadequate homes due to a lack of affordable housing or emergency shelters.

Funding gap

While Canada's social safety net has suffered from years of government cuts, First Nations communities are bearing even more of the burden. As the Assembly of First Nations points out, spending on First Nations is half the amount for average Canadians: $7,000-$8,000 compared to $15,000-$16,000. Since 2000, First Nations budgets have declined by almost 13 per cent.  By contrast, Canada Health and Social Transfers to provinces are growing at an average rate of 6.6 per cent per year.

More than 12 years ago, the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples made extensive recommendations to improve the situation of Aboriginal Peoples, however, these recommendations were either ignored or ineffectively implemented.

Time for action

In recent months, the Canadian government refused to sign the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Aboriginal Peoples and backed away from the Kelowna Accord that dedicated $5.1 billion to improving the socioeconomic conditions of Aboriginal people in Canada.

The current Harper government is turning its back on Aboriginal peoples in Canada. Strong, vibrant, healthy and prosperous Aboriginal communities make for a better and more equitable country. What we need is the political will to make it happen.

-- With information from the Assembly of First Nations, Inuit Women of Canada, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, Campaign 2000 and Statistics Canada.


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Date Modified : 2008/06/20

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