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Indigenous leaders lobby premiers on NAFTA, marijuana, jobs and infrastructure

Indigenous leaders lobby premiers on NAFTA, marijuana, jobs and infrastructure

Adding runways, ports and broadband internet access to Canada’s high north. Writing an Indigenous peoples chapter into the North American Free Trade Agreement. Including Indigenous growers in Canada’s imminent marijuana legalization plan.

Three Indigenous leaders had the chance to share their biggest concerns with Canada’s premiers and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday at the First Ministers’ Meeting in Ottawa.

Perry Bellegarde, President of the National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said the leaders were “completely rushed” by the limited timeframe and need another meeting to tackle the concerns in depth.

Bellegarde’s concerns centred around the economy and finding ways to invest in young Indigenous workers.

“We have an aging workforce. But the youngest and fastest growing segment of Canada’s population is young First Nations men and women. And so invest in human capital – in education, in skills development and training,” Bellegarde said. “And that will help unlock Canada’s economic potential.”

On marijuana legalization, Bellegarde accused past governments of leaving Indigenous communities out of supply management, the system that regulates industries such as dairy and egg production.

This time, Bellegarde said First Nations need to have a seat at the table.

“We can’t be shut out. So if there’s licenses for growing medicinal marijuana, we want to be part of that growing industry,” he said.

“I even challenged them: don’t issue a license to a CEO of a private company until that show that they’ve got an Indigenous strategy for employment and procurement.”

Bellegarde insisted that each premier make it a priority to regularly meet with chiefs in their respective provinces to hear their concerns. On the federal level, he urged Trudeau’s government to include concerns about Canada’s Indigenous communities in ongoing NAFTA negotiations.

“They should be supporting that, because things have changed since 1994,” he said.

Natan Obed, President of Canada’s national Inuit group, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, focused his comments on the social inequity faced by Inuit communities.

Obed cited a $60,000 wage discrepancy between Inuit and non-Inuit people and a 10-year life expectancy gap as major economic barriers.

“So growing the middle class and the rhetoric that we often hear the Liberals talk about – we need to create a middle class in many ways. We need to create social equity for our people,” he said.

To do so, Obed said investments need to be made in infrastructure in Canada’s north.

“I think that Canada still is an incomplete nation,” he said. “(In) the Inuit homeland, we still have a long way to go to ensure that all communities have ports, that we have working runways, that we have basic infrastructure that most Canadians take for granted.”

Clement Chartier, President of the Metis National Council, said he used his time to seek a distinctions-based Metis Nations process with the leaders.

“Because we have issues that are distinct from First Nations and Inuit. And unless we deal with our issues in a concrete way with these premiers … then we won’t be making as much progress as we can,” he said.

Bellegarde said he wasn’t given a clear answer from the premiers about a future meeting. Regardless, he says he used his time to express the importance of investing in Indigenous communities.

“If we can close that socioeconomic gap that exists now, it’s not only good for First Nations people, it’s good for Canada, because those social costs are going to come down,” he said.

credit:420intel.com