Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Minister Says Change Won't Come 'Overnight' As New Indigenous Child-Welfare Law Takes Effect

The Canadian Press, 02 Jan, 2020 07:42 PM

    OTTAWA - Some Indigenous communities could soon take over authority for their child-welfare systems under a federal law that took effect this week.

     

    The new law, Bill C-92, affirms the rights of those communities to enforce their own rules around child and family services.

     

    It also shifts the focus of those services to preventing the removal of children from their families and communities.

     

    Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the goal is to improve the health and well-being of Indigenous children currently under care and in generations to come.

     

    A number of Indigenous communities have already expressed keen interest in taking over those responsibilities.

     

    Indigenous children account for more than half of all kids in foster care even though fewer than 10 per cent of all Canadian children are Indigenous.

     

    "Change will not come overnight," Miller said in a statement issued Wednesday.

     

    "The only way to achieve this is to continue to work with our partners through this transition period to make sure the law works for First Nations, Inuit and Metis people, and most importantly, for their children," the minister said.

     

    Until Indigenous communities pass their own child-services laws, Miller said services currently provided to Indigenous children will continue as before.

     

    However, under Bill C-92, which became law in June and took effect Wednesday, Indigenous service providers will immediately have to apply basic principles set out in the act when a child comes into care, including consideration of the child's physical and emotional well-being, the importance of the child's relationship with his or her family and community and maintaining a connection to their culture.

     

    Some Indigenous communities have expressed concerns that no stable funding to help them take over child-welfare services has been provided under the legislation.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters
    OTTAWA - The federal government is giving the Alberta government a passing grade for its industrial carbon tax.    

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

    Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

    The BC Coroners Service says there were 69 suspected overdoses deaths in October, a 42 per cent decrease from those killed by illicit drugs in the same month last year.

    Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary
    On the evening of Dec. 6, 1989, a gunman entered Montreal's Ecole polytechnique, killing 14 women in an anti-feminist mass slaying before taking his own life.

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary

    Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Ratify Deal With Coast Mountain Bus Company

    Members of Unifor Locals 111 and 2200 voted on the agreement Thursday night.    

    Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Ratify Deal With Coast Mountain Bus Company

    B.C. To Eliminate Medical Services Plan Premiums Not Paid By Residents Elsewhere

    British Columbians will ring in the new year by joining all Canadians in not paying monthly rates for health care.

    B.C. To Eliminate Medical Services Plan Premiums Not Paid By Residents Elsewhere

    19-Yr-Old JAGVIR MALHI Was An Unintended Victim Of Abbotsford Targeted Shooting: IHIT

    “Jagvir Malhi was a young university student. He had no criminal history but there were those in his life who were involved in the gang conflict,” said IHIT Sgt. Frank Jang.

    19-Yr-Old JAGVIR MALHI Was An Unintended Victim Of Abbotsford Targeted Shooting: IHIT