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Liberals pledge $9B in new money for Indigenous communities in 2024 budget

Liberals pledge $9B in new money for Indigenous communities in 2024 budget

CBC
Wednesday, April 17, 2024 11:56:49 AM UTC

The Trudeau government is promising $9 billion in new cash for Indigenous communities over the next five years, a smaller spend than some past budgets but one the government says builds on past investments and maintains an upward trend.

The plan sparked mixed reviews from Indigenous leaders, with some immediately panning it as a failure and others lauding the spending of new money for Indigenous Peoples in anxious economic times.

With no single big-ticket item for Indigenous Peoples this year, ongoing Liberal commitments and previous pledges figure prominently in Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's latest federal budget.

"Spending on Indigenous priorities has increased significantly since 2015 (181 per cent) with spending for 2023-24 estimated to be over $30.5 billion," the budget says.

Yet as she rose Tuesday in the House of Commons to table the plan, Freeland didn't mention reconciliation — a topic that figured prominently in Liberal budgets past — nor did she mention Indigenous issues at an earlier news conference with reporters.

Budget 2024's biggest line items on that front include $1.5 billion for Indigenous child and family services, $1.2 billion for First Nations kindergarten to Grade 12 education, and $1 billion for First Nations and Inuit health.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his ministers had fanned out en masse in the weeks before the budget, announcing a raft of housing and affordability measures targeting younger voters, which raised expectations among Indigenous groups as well.

The spending plan offers $918 million for Indigenous housing and community infrastructure, on top of $5 billion already available this year from past budgets, "to narrow housing and infrastructure gaps" in Indigenous communities.

That new money represents less than one per cent of the $135.1 billion the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) says is required to solve the housing crunch in First Nations communities alone, without considering Inuit and Métis needs.

At that rate, "hell will freeze over" before First Nations have access to sufficient and adequate housing, said Cathy Merrick, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs. 

"So I'm waiting for hell to freeze over for that," said Merrick, who was in the gallery for the budget speech.

Merrick denounced the budget as a failure and a disappointment that offers just enough money to keep First Nations quiet politically but not enough to make substantial progress. 

Other new cash envelopes promise $927 million for on-reserve income assistance, $640 million to support Indigenous mental health and $467 million for First Nations and Inuit-led policing, a program Canada's auditor general recently found was poorly managed and failed to spend millions of dollars from its existing budget.

Joining Merrick outside the House of Commons in Ottawa, AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak gave the budget a score of five out of 10. 

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