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Top News - February - 2002

Published February 18, 2002

Métis goalie, Troy Derhouseff, of the BBD Blues PeeWee Tier 5 team, wards off shots from the KC Terminators in a league game in Edmonton on Feb. 9. The Blues won 7-5 in the tilt.

Photo by Brad Crowfoot

Funding cuts put young people in jeopardy

Chalifoux Award presented at NAIT

Alberta drum group up for Grammy

This is only a partial listing of the stories featured in the February 2002 issue of Alberta Sweetgrass. If you are not receiving your own copy of Sweetgrass, then you have missed out on a lot.


Funding cuts put young people in jeopardy

Rob McKinley, Sweetgrass Writer, Lac La Biche

Changes to Early Intervention funding could leave dozens of children and teens at the Kikino Métis Settlement and in Lac la Biche without a place to call their own.

Alberta's Child Services department announced late last year that the province has altered its focus on where early intervention dollars will be spent. The funds will now be directed toward helping children who are already at risk, rather than preventative programs like those offered at the youth centres in Lac la Biche and Kikino.

Close to 100 Aboriginal youngsters in both northeastern Alberta communities don't want to lose their facilities.

"We come here and stay out of trouble. We have some place safe to come to. We aren't out on the streets doing stupid things," said Lac la Biche's youth centre user Kristi Malofe.

The young users at both centres feel so strongly about the facilities that they have taken it upon themselves to plead their cases to the government.

In Lac la Biche, the teens at the Making A Difference Youth Centre are mounting a fight.

Hearing that the government had cut funding, the teens took it upon themselves to fight for their centre. They initiated a letter-writing campaign which put their feelings onto papers that made it to several child and family services offices, including Iris Evans, the minister of Children's Services.
"We told them that the centre keeps us out of trouble, that we wanted our funding and to leave the centre open," said "Tweety," one of 50 local teenagers who use Lac la Biche's youth centre.

And if the government thinks that a bunch of kids will eventually give up the fight, they haven't met these kids.

"We'll keep sending them letters until they realize these kids aren't going to leave them alone," Tweety continued.

In Kikino, children marched through the community, waving signs and banners that showed their displeasure about their facility facing closure.

According to Bob McManus, the spokesman for Region 12 of the Children's Services region that stretches from Lac la Biche to St. Paul, the early intervention funding criteria had to be changed to meet a growing number of children who are falling through the cracks.

"There needs to be more focus on children at risk rather than programs for the general population," said McManus, explaining that a funding application was received from Lac la Biche's youth centre, but it didn't meet the new criteria set out in a 51-page booklet issued in October.

"The criteria has changed."

Part of the reason for the change, McManus said, is the sharp increase in the early intervention cases the child services department has seen over the last few years.

At the Lac la Biche headquarters, child welfare cases have increased almost 20 per cent over the last two years.

Those increases have forced the province to put more focus on children who are already at risk.
To Denise White, the council vice-chairman at the Kikino Métis Settlement, and the president of the Kikino Family Circle Society, that logic doesn't make sense.

"This is prevention what we are doing here already. We give the kids somewhere to go and something to do. It has been working, so why do they want to change it now?"

According to settlement council member Floyd Thompson, the youth program in Kikino has kept crime and child welfare cases down.

"There are only four child welfare cases in our community," he said. "We must be doing something right."

And the community isn't ready to risk that just because the government wants to shuffle the deck.
"We are not going to quit here. I don't think the minister is doing the right thing," said Thompson, adding that the council will make this a political issue. "As elected leaders we are not doing our job if we allow them to put the wrecking-ball to the program."

He plans to write letters, make phone calls and meet with the minister to discuss the issue further.
"We need to stand up for our kids, because how hard can kids fight against this?"

Kikino's youth centre, which operated on a $100,000 budget, closed for business early in February as staff and settlement officials look for other funding options and lobby the province.

In Lac la Biche, where the centre needs $50,000 to operate, the funds will run out by the end of March.

So far, neither community has received a response from provincial officials.

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Chalifoux Award presented at NAIT

Inna Dansereau, Sweetgrass Writer, Edmonton

Major energy company TransCanada PipeLines Limited has received an award from the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology that recognizes 14 years of support for Aboriginal education at NAIT and an annual $3,500 scholarship.

On Feb. 8, members of the Aboriginal Student Club presented the third annual Senator Chalifoux Award to TransCanada during the college's celebration of Aboriginal Awareness Day at the main campus. The senator was on hand to witness the presentation.

The award named after her was started in 2000. It goes to an individual or organization that has provided outstanding encouragement and support for the advancement of Aboriginal education at NAIT.

"With the Aboriginal cultural day we wanted to highlight people who contributed to the society," said Eva Stang, Aboriginal liaison co-ordinator at the school. Stang personally chose to name the award after the senator.

"When she became a senator, I was just ecstatic to think that here's . . . a Métis woman who has contributed so much to this city as well as to this nation . . . I chose her because of her special qualities . . . she never forgets where she comes from."

In 1988, the predecessor of TransCanada PipeLines, NovaGas Transmission Limited, donated $35,000 to develop an annual scholarship program. To date more than $40,000 has been awarded to Aboriginal students pursuing post-secondary studies.

Stang said, "We recognize TransCanada today because they have provided thousands of dollars to Aboriginal education and we wanted to make sure that they are aware that the students at NAIT are very appreciative of their donation towards the education."

"The $3,500 annual scholarship has made a difference in the lives of the students and their families ­ and that I can attest to. Scholarships are so important because we all come pretty well from poor backgrounds and the struggles are great," Chalifoux said.

"The TransCanada PipeLines I remember as Nova . . . and a leader in Aboriginal participation within the oil and gas industry," the senator added.

The TransCanada fund generates yearly interest, which is given as a scholarship to one of Aboriginal students at NAIT, said Victoria Sedgwick, who came to accept the award on behalf of the company.

Any Aboriginal student who is enrolled at NAIT and who wants to give his knowledge back to his community after graduation can apply for this scholarship, she said.

"We ask questions about school grades. We need to see that there is a potential for the students to stay in school. We ask about community involvement and financial need," Sedgwick said about the application procedure.

"Not as many (apply) as we would like. I think that within Aboriginal students there is still a misconception on them having to have a really high grade point average (GPA) to even be considered.

"We don't look at GPA; we just look at the amount of effort that the student has put in. We do personal interviews," said Sedgwick. "The scholarship decision is usually (made) on individual basis."

Sedgwick added, "We do business within their (Aboriginal) communities. Part of doing this effectively in the community is to create partnerships . . . Having scholarships is one opportunity to create a partnership with the community."

Scholarships also encourage students to stay in school, she said.

"So the more people there are available for employment, the better it is for TransCanada.

"Anything that we can do to help these students realize their potential and become full contributing members in the community is just an honor."

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Alberta drum group up for Grammy

Paul Barnsley, Sweetgrass Writer, Saddle Lake First Nation

Ben Cardinal and the other 11 members of the Northern Cree Drum Group will be rubbing elbows with the music world's biggest names on Feb. 26. Twenty-four hours later, they'll find out if they are this year's winners of the Grammy award for best Native American music album.

Northern Cree, based out of the northern Alberta Saddle Lake First Nation, is the only group from the Canadian side of the US/Canada border to get a Grammy nomination this year. Cardinal told Sweetgrass the group will attend an exclusive nominees-only party the night before the 44th annual Grammy awards are handed out at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The show will be broadcast live on CBS on Feb. 27 at 8 p.m. (ET/PT). Jon Stewart of Comedy Central TV's The Daily Show will be the host.

The National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, also known as the Recording Academy, was established in 1957. It's "dedicated to improving the quality of life and cultural condition for music and its makers." The organization has a membership of more than 20,000 musicians, producers and other recording professionals.

The Northern Cree's Rockin' The Rez album, released last year by Canyon Records of Phoenix, AZ, is one of six nominated works. The others are: Life Goes On - Hand Drum and Round Dance Songs by Black Eagle, Weasel Tail's Dream -The Tradition Continues, by the Black Lodge Singers, Bless The People - Harmonized Peyote Songs by Verdell Primeaux and Johnny Mike, the Gathering Of Nations 2000: Millennium Celebration - Vol. 1 (Various Northern Drums) Tom Bee and Douglas Spotted Eagle, producers, and Change Of Life - Oklahoma Powwow Songs by Young Bird.

Rockin' The Rez is a collection of contemporary powwow music, based on traditional songs and techniques but with a modern twist.

"We come up with all the songs ourselves," said Cardinal. "They're all composed by members of the group."

Although the music appeals to all ages, recordings of popular drum groups have become big sellers among young people on the powwow trail in recent years as the art form grows in popularity.

"All over, people are coming up to us and asking us for autographs. That's pretty cool," the 20-year-old said. "We kind of got used to it. When we'd go out to these powwows, even before this nomination, people would be buying our tapes and they'd ask us to autograph them. We got used to signing people's shirts or people's casts or someone's tape or CDs."

The Northern Cree members hope the nomination and possible Grammy win will open some more doors for them in the entertainment world. Cardinal said the group has already appeared in a feature film, performing their music in Grey Owl with Pierce Brosnan.

"We've also been up to Ottawa to sing at Parliament Hill and things like that," he said. "This could open up a lot of opportunities to travel and see the world."

Cardinal said Saddle Lake has a long, proud history of keeping the traditional music alive and there were lots of capable teachers in the community to help the group along.

"It's been passed on for generations here in Saddle Lake," he said. "Saddle Lake's very well known for singers who have passed on, like Alec Wood to Sam McGillivray, they're like the grandfathers of singing out here."

Two members of the group - Steven Wood and Ferlin McGillivray - are in their 40s. The youngest member is Joel Wood, who is 13. Shane Redstar, Conan Yellowbird, Randy Wood, Shane Dion, Leroy Brown, Bill Cardinal, Aaron McGillivary and Saskatchewan import Jonas Tootootsis will all fly to the awards show in Los Angeles on Feb. 25, courtesy of Canyon Records.

Cardinal said they're looking forward to going to the nominees' party with high profile performers like Jennifer Lopez and others.

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