
Inuit call on prime minister to step in as end to child funding program approaches
The head of Canada's national Inuit organization is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to step in to save a program that helps fund services for Inuit kids.
In a letter sent to Trudeau last week, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Natan Obed called on the prime minister to "clearly signal" his "government's commitment" to continue funding for the Inuit Child First Initiative (ICFI), which is set to end on March 31.
"We are alarmed by the growing likelihood of an abrupt curtailing of funding for the program and the consequences this will have for our families and communities," Obed wrote on Feb. 12.
"lf program funding is not renewed, many families will again be left vulnerable to the systemic racial discrimination that characterizes health and education service delivery in Inuit Nunangat."
The letter comes after Obed said Inuit treaty organizations have been negotiating with Ottawa on a long-term approach to funding the ICFI, which was launched in 2019 to support Jordan's Principle.
Jordan's Principle stems from a human rights complaint filed by the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Family and Caring Society in 2007. They argued First Nations kids were being denied services equal to those available to other children as a result of constant jurisdictional disputes between the federal and provincial governments.
Under Jordan's Principle, families are to apply for and receive funding as they need it, and the provinces and federal government are expected to sort out jurisdictional battles over who pays for it later.
ICFI funds an array of services in Nunavut alone, including access to speech-language pathologists, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder treatment services and school food programs, said the Arctic Children and Youth Foundation (ACYF), which helps facilitate ICFI applications.
ICFI also helps fund food voucher programs. Eighteen of Nunavut's 25 communities are signed up, with more 13,000 kids enrolled.
Food voucher programs give families $500 a month per child to help buy food, plus another $250 for kids younger than four.
Worry began before Parliament was prorogued
On Tuesday, the City of Iqaluit warned its residents to prepare for the program's end.
The ACYF recently surveyed Nunavut communities on the impact of losing the program and shared the responses with The Canadian Press.
"A lot of people depend on ICFI now…. If it stops, a lot of children will probably rely on the soup kitchen again," said one senior administrative officer in the ACYF survey.
"I have two kids with anemia. We haven't gone to the health centre since the program started. That's a nice change," said another community member.
ICFI was always set to sunset on March 31, and with Parliament prorogued the government will have only a short window to get appropriations passed to keep the program alive into the new fiscal year.
But Obed said Inuit started worrying about the program's survival well before Parliament was prorogued on Jan. 6.
"We felt as though there was a distancing happening in the last six months that has become more acute in the last couple of months," Obed told The Canadian Press.
He said Inuit paused negotiations six months ago so they could get a clear direction from Ottawa on what it was willing to take on long-term, and focused on working out what a shared responsibility model would look like.
"It's been hard, though, to negotiate that shared model when we don't have the clear terms and conditions from the federal government about what they're willing to negotiate and what they're not," Obed said.
Obed said he's had good dialogue with Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu but the minister hasn't been able to give clear direction on the program either.
"I hope this is not just a cold calculation of political priority, where the country has decided that it has spent too much money on Indigenous peoples, and this is one of the areas where it would need to start tightening the purse strings," he said.
Feds previously stated support for ICFI
Nunavut Health Minister John Main said he's asked Hajdu about the program's future but has received no response.
"It's causing me quite a good deal of concern, not knowing, because I'm looking at the health aspects to it and all the benefits," Main said. "Like on the nutrition side, we know one of the key things we're up against is food insecurity here in Nunavut."
Newly-elected Nunavut Tunngavik President Jeremy Tunraluk said he's also received no response from Hajdu's office on the file.
"We've reached out multiple times…. It really is very concerning that we're not getting any responses from her office," Tunraluk said.
Hajdu was unavailable for an interview Tuesday to respond to Obed's letter. The Canadian Press has reached out to the Prime Minister's Office for comment but has not yet received a response.
In a previous interview with The Canadian Press, Hajdu said Ottawa is committed to co-developing a long-term model for the program.
"I know that there's a lot of anxiety related to where the government is politically right now," she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
34 minutes ago
- CTV News
Canada to boost defence spending to 2% of GDP this fiscal year
Ahead of next week's G7 summit, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Monday that Canada will boost defence spending by billions of dollars to meet NATO's two per cent of GDP target this fiscal year. 'We will further accelerate our investments in the years to come, consistent with meeting our new security imperatives,' Carney announced during a speech at the Munk School in Toronto. 'We will ensure every dollar is invested wisely, including by prioritizing made-in-Canada manufacturing and supply chains,' he added.'We should no longer send three quarters of our defence capital spending to America.' Carney's new timeline comes well ahead of the 2030 target he pledged during the federal election. Just last year, the previous government under former prime minister Justin Trudeau committed to hitting two per cent by 2032. Canada has never met NATO's existing spending target since it first pledged to do so in 2014 and has faced public pressure from member countries for years to reach that target. The issue of defence spending is expected to be a major focal point at the NATO summit in The Hague later this month, where Secretary General Mark Rutte has signalled he will propose an overall investment plan that would increase defence investment to five per cent of GDP — 3.5 per cent for core defence spending and 1.5 per cent in defence-related investments like infrastructure. The most recent NATO figures show Canada spent 1.45 per cent of its GDP on defence in 2024. At the moment, 22 of the 32 member countries meet or exceed NATO's current two per cent target. According to National Defence, Canada is projected to spend $44.2 billion on defence in the 2025-26 fiscal year. A report released last fall from the parliamentary budget officer said the federal government would need to spend $81.9 billion to hit the two per cent of GDP target by 2032-33. This is a breaking story. More to come.


Toronto Star
a day ago
- Toronto Star
‘Not a fall guy yet:' The savvy and staying power of former Bay Street titan and Ottawa survivor Michael Wilson
Mike Wilson once told me the idea to run for Parliament came to him after a 1977 business trip to Hong Kong. Wilson said he became 'haunted' by the words of an Asian businessman who said, 'We look at Canada, that vast expanse of land where you have resources and can produce food. You've got everything going for you. Why are you messing it up so badly?' Wilson resigned as executive vice-president at Dominion Securities and won public office in 1979. By the time Saturday Night assigned me in 1985 to write a profile on Wilson, he'd been minister of finance for a year. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW My interview time with Wilson included five hours on an Air Canada flight from Toronto to San Francisco. In those days, Air Canada was a Crown corporation but there were plans to turn it into a public company. When a member of Air Canada's counter staff gave Wilson indifferent service, I could see his face harden. 'That's why I want to get some shares out into the hands of the public,' he muttered, 'so they have an interest in improving the service.' Business Opinion Rod McQueen: The man who could have been PM — before an infamous fumble zapped his chances Fumbling photo of Stanfield became a metaphor for his beleaguered campaign, writes Rod McQueen, The speech Wilson gave in the Mark Hopkins Hotel ballroom was received with similar lethargy. When his twenty-three minute talk concluded, he was rewarded with all of nine seconds of applause. If Mike Wilson counted on audience response for nourishment, he'd starve. As I researched the article, many friends and colleagues described him as naive and guileless. I formed the thesis that if Wilson's deficit predictions didn't work out or some financial crisis caused economic trouble for the country, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney would blame his self-effacing finance minister because Wilson wouldn't protest. Among the many anecdotes he told me, one involved him saying to a fellow cabinet minister who'd complained about back pain, 'You don't have a bad back, you've got a bad front.' When the fact-checker from Saturday Night called Wilson and he learned that this comment was in the article, Wilson called me several times to remove the quote. I eventually agreed. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW My story was on the March 1986 cover. The close-up photograph of Wilson showed him adjusting his tie and looking up with the hint of a smile. The cover line read, 'Is the minister of finance about to become Brian Mulroney's fall guy?' Wilson proved me wrong. He had the savvy and staying power required for the role as finance minister from 1984-91. At one point during that period, I received a brown envelope from the Department of Finance. There was no note. There was no need. Inside was the torn-off Saturday Night cover featuring his smile that somehow seemed to have grown wider. In his own hand he'd written, 'Not a fall guy yet' and signed his name. Business Opinion Rod McQueen: Life lessons from Canadian Shark Robert Herjavec: 'I never wanted to be really rich, I just didn't want to be poor' 'It's amazing what you can achieve in ten years,' multi-millionaire Shark Tank star Robert I assumed that this jocular notation meant that he'd forgiven me for my description. He had not. A few years later when I called him to ask for an interview about another matter, he browbeat me again about the 'bad front' quote, before finally agreeing. Wilson was certainly not one of those politicians with a needy ego. The Economist once declared, 'Many Americans seem to think that theirs is just a large country, stuck between dull old Canada and noisy Mexico.' Said a droll letter to the editor, 'Why do you persist in calling Canada dull? What is it you want? Do you know that Canadians are the world curling champions? Do you know that the paint roller is a Canadian invention? Have you ever heard Michael Wilson speak? A country can only stand so much excitement.' ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The writer was Frank Potter, then Canada's executive director at the Washington-based World Bank, a Wilson appointee who knew the minister wouldn't mind a bit of lighthearted fun at his own expense. After fourteen years in Parliament, Wilson did not run for re-election in 1993, a wise decision as it turned out because his Progressive Conservative party was reduced to two seats. He returned to his old firm, by then called RBC Dominion Securities, as vice-chairman. Wilson's life was forever altered in 1995 when his only son, Cameron, who suffered from mental health issues, died by suicide. Wilson's high-profile role in Parliament allowed him to draw public attention to a topic about which he cared deeply. Business Opinion Rod McQueen: He was a prime minister and a Bay Street player. He lost elections and influence. John Turner didn't shy away from the arena He could charm an audience and he could stumble verbally. He could lead, but knew well his He launched a fundraising campaign for the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation. He also gave speeches about the need to help all those with mental illness as well as the importance of not staying silent when it strikes family. I can't think of very many other high-profile individuals who took such a courageous stand. Mike Wilson, who died in 2019, was proof positive that you can thrive after a Bay Street role as well as time in Ottawa, the city that has withered many a heart.


Global News
2 days ago
- Global News
Carney says Canada to focus on peace, energy security and new partnerships at G7 meeting
Canada has unveiled its priorities for the G7 leaders' summit just one week before it gets underway in Alberta as the government defends its decision to invite India to the summit. Prime Minister Mark Carney's office says Ottawa's top priority for the summit will be strengthening global peace and security, which includes countering foreign interference and transnational crime, as well as improving responses to wildfires. His office also says Canada will focus on spurring economic growth by improving energy security, fortifying supply chains for critical minerals and accelerating the use of artificial intelligence. Lastly, Canada will discuss creating jobs by securing partnerships to open new markets and generate large infrastructure investments. In addition, Canada plans to use its invitation for guests outside the group to discuss how to secure a lasting peace in Ukraine, and to 'build coalitions with reliable partners.' Story continues below advertisement Carney is hosting the summit in Kananaskis, Alta., from June 15 to 17, welcoming U.S. President Donald Trump on his first visit to Canada during this presidential term. Canada is expecting to welcome leaders of the other liberal democracies that make up the G7: the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Italy and the European Union. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Analysts say the summit has come together under a time crunch, with Ottawa choosing the June date months ago before former prime minister Justin Trudeau resigned and a federal election campaign — which traditionally slows work in the public service. In addition to the G7 members, the host country can invite other leaders in order to give priority nations a voice at the summit. Carney revealed on Friday he had extended an invitation to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, despite the RCMP accusing New Delhi of widespread acts of murder, extortion and coercion primarily against Sikh activists in Canada, including an assassination near Vancouver two years ago. Story continues below advertisement At least four other international leaders have accepted their invitations to Kananaskis: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has said she's considering Canada's invitation. The NDP and major Sikh groups in Canada have condemned Carney's decision to invite Modi, arguing the move puts economic concerns ahead of human rights. Supriya Dwivedi, a former senior advisor to previous prime minister Justin Trudeau, derided the invitation as Carney's government 'thinking some Canadian lives matter more than others,' she wrote on the platform Bluesky. 'It will also be incredibly difficult to take anything this (government) says on transnational repression and foreign interference seriously given this pivot,' she wrote. Others have said it's time for Canada to manage security issues through a structured process with India and not let the criminal allegations and India's concerns about Sikh separatism dominate the bilateral relationship. At a virtual news conference Saturday, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand stressed her government 'will not undermine' the RCMP investigation into alleged criminality by Indian agents. 'The fact that leaders from a number of countries have been invited to this meeting does not, and should not, detract from the importance of the independent investigation that is ongoing and the rule of law considerations which are absolutely paramount,' she said. Story continues below advertisement Anand said Carney decides which countries get an invitation, and was circumspect about what criteria Ottawa is using to choose which leaders to invite. 'The meeting will allow global leaders to discuss issues of global concern, which is the general purpose of this meeting, and we are honoured to be able to invite leaders to our country,' she said. 'The prime minister will be hosting these leaders for a discussion (on) very serious issues that affect the global economy and the geostrategic environment.'