Manitoba child welfare system robs First Nations of future leaders and advocates, lawsuit signatories say
CBC
When Amber Laplante was 14, she was apprehended by child and family services and bounced around between foster homes, group homes, hotels, a youth penitentiary and mental health facilities. Later, her two children were taken into care as well.
A plaintiff in the lawsuit seeking $1 billion from the Manitoba government and the Attorney General of Canada on behalf of First Nations children, families and communities impacted by the child welfare system, Laplante said she was disconnected from her culture and identity when she was in the child welfare system.
Laplante had minimal contact with her Child and Family Services (CFS) worker, was never encouraged to reconnect with her culture or community of Little Saskatchewan First Nation in the Interlake region of central Manitoba, about 225 km north of Winnipeg, and received no help applying for Indian status, she said.
"The Child and Family Services system failed me. When I was in care, I was exposed to violence and trauma. I was always treated as a problem and never as a person," Laplante said at an Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) news conference on Thursday.
"I never received the support I needed to heal."
AMC's First Nations family advocate filed a statement of claim with Court of King's Bench on Thursday, seeking the damages for those affected between 1992 and the present day.
The chiefs of three First Nations — Black River First Nation, Pimicikamak Cree Nation and Misipawastik Cree Nation —who are also named as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said Laplante's story is one of many.
They said children who are apprehended from members of their communities face lifelong barriers reconnecting with their culture and kin.
The three nations said Indigenous children who are apprehended off-reserve face immense challenges feeling a connection with their home community, culture and language, and sometimes lack appropriate supports to receive benefits they are owed by the government that are enshrined in treaties, according to court documents.
Chief Sheldon Kent of Black River First Nation, north of Powerview-Pine Falls, about 120 km northeast of Winnipeg, said in the statement of claim that children who are apprehended and brought to urban centres "lack a sense of home or belonging."
They are also sometimes deprived of existing opportunities to better connect with their culture, he said.
The Southeast Tribal Council established Southeast Collegiate in Winnipeg to provide culturally-informed high school education to First Nations youth who are in the city, however, youth in care can't attend the school because they are required to stay within the provincial school system, the court document stated.
David Monias, chief of the Pimicikamak Cree Nation, about 530 km north of Winnipeg, accused child welfare agencies of "often" failing to register children who are apprehended as status Indians, which has long-lasting impacts on the child and their home community.
"Every time an agency fails to register the children in their care, that First Nation also loses potential funding to support that child, including for post-secondary education and health benefits," Monias said in the statement of claim.
P.E.I.'s Public Schools Branch is looking for 50 substitute bus drivers, and it'll be recruiting at three job fairs on Saturday, June 8. The job fairs are located at the Atlantic Superstore in Montague, Royalty Crossing in Charlottetown, and the bus parking lot of Three Oaks Senior High in Summerside. All three run from 9 a.m. until noon. Dave Gillis, the director of transportation and risk management for the Public Schools Branch, said the number of substitute drivers they're hiring isn't unusual. "We are always looking for more. Our drivers tend to have an older demographic," he said.