May - 2007
Two per cent is no solution, secret report
By Paul Barnsley, Windspeaker Staff Writer
OTTAWA
Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice received a report on Groundhog
Day that describes a very serious financial situation within
his department, but he and his government apparently decided
not to notice the black shadow on the horizon.
National Chief Phil Fontaine said the shadow is getting harder
and harder to ignore.
The minister was told about the precarious financial situation
at Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) six weeks before
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty read his March 19 budget speech.
First Nation observers are wondering why so little was done about
those urgent warnings.
The 33-page report, entitled "Is two per cent enough? INAC
funding for First Nations basic services," is labeled "Secret-Advice
to minister." The first sentence, under the heading "Issue,"
sets the tone, saying that "policy and program pressures
are beyond the capacity of the substantial $6 billion departmental
budget." A spending freeze imposed during the deficit cutting
days of the Chretien Liberals placed a two per cent a year cap
on growth for INAC's budget in 1996. It's still in place, even
as inflation and rising population numbers have strained budgets.
The document's author seeks to inform the minister that after
10 years of INAC managers robbing Peter to pay Paul as they attempt
to provide basic services, the department is now at the breaking
point, and many basic services have been cannibalized to address
other, more pressing matters that could lead to political embarrassment
for the government.
While the 10-year-old cap is set at two per cent, the report
said spending that couldn't be avoided has meant that costs are
actually rising at a slightly higher rate.
Specific targeted increases for such "gap filling"
programs as special education have added an average of 0.9 per
cent annually for an average total annual increase of 2.9 per
cent. This growth lags the combined population and price increases
of four per cent, resulting in an annual shortfall of 1.1 per
cent.
Since the 1996 program review decision, "there has been
a six per cent decrease in constant dollar per capita on reserve
expenditures." In another three-page document, obtained
by a federal opposition party, the figure attached to the funding
increase for this fiscal year is 0.6 per cent, well below even
the two per cent figure.
Weeks before the budget, the author of the report told the minister
that millions would be needed to get back to even and that the
government must consider health and safety concerns if the problem
is not addressed.
That set off alarm bells with Ottawa insiders.
"In what other population in the country could you have
a department of professionals warning about health and safety
risks and then have it ignored," said one, on the condition
of anonymity.
There's another genuine bombshell in the 33-page report.
"To some extent, the funding outlined by the First Ministers'
Meeting would address the shortfall," it states. "Additional
funding of about $50 million per year plus an A-base adjustment
of up to $500 million would be required to match First Nations
population and price growth of the last decade." A-base
funding is a department's permanent core of funding to which
special short-term program costs are added each year.
The $5.1 billion plan approved in Kelowna and abandoned by the
Conservative government, in other words, wouldn't have done much
more than bring INAC financing up to par.
The bureaucrat's comments also revealed that funding for First
Nation administrative positions is stuck in the distant past.
"The department and First Nations have coped with the shortfall
primarily through reallocating from the infrastructure program
and through limiting growth in various program areas (e.g. First
Nations staff salaries and benefits)," the author wrote,
later adding that "tribal council and band advisory positions
are still funded at $50,000 a year (since 1986). INAC funds employees'
benefits at 12.5 per cent versus federal at 20 per cent."
And it appears that "Indians" are of secondary importance
in the department of Indian and Northern Affairs.
"Significant economic growth in the north, fueled by resource
development and oil and gas exploration and development, has
outstripped the Northern Affairs Organization's ability to provide
effective support to economic development activity in the territories.
Pressures on operations have resulted in reallocation of more
than $40 million annually from Indian and Inuit programming,
which is not sustainable," the report stated. "Over
the last five years, the department has been required to reallocate
funding to cover new government priorities (e.g. clean up of
northern contaminated sites). There is little remaining flexibility
to reallocate without major policy and program decisions about
redesign."
The department resorted to "Treasury Board contingency votes
or Governor General's warrants" to cover this year's funding
requirements. Ottawa sources say those two devices are emergency
measures for line departments to get money outside of their budgets.
Government funding for non-Native people in the territories is
almost twice that of First Nations
"On-reserve per capita expenditures are less than territorial
per capita expenditures despite similar demographics, scale of
operations and geographical challenges. The 6.8 per cent annual
growth in federal transfers to territories (96/97 to 04/05) compares
to 2.9 per cent growth in basic services funding for First Nations.
On reserve expenditures exclude claims and litigation,"
the minister was told.
With all the attention on water quality problems on reserve,
it's interesting to note that $293 million was reallocated from
INAC's "capital" budget to other areas.
While capped at two per cent, costs for elementary and secondary
education for First Nation students have been rising by 4.4 per
cent a year, the report states. Close to $100 million has been
reallocated to address that shortfall. The report notes that
the higher cost "reflects 'price-taker' nature of provincial
school expenditures."
First Nation technicians say that is an alarming comment that
means that the government will pay provincial (non-Native) education
systems when they raise their prices, but not First Nations.
And the money to pay the provincial school systems is cannibalized
from basic services budgets.
Assembly of First Nation sources are calling the situation described
in this report "fiscal discrimination."
"It confirms everything that we've been saying for the last
while," Fontaine said during a phone interview on April
13. "Our communities and our governments are seriously under-funded
and the unfair expectations placed on our governments are really
discriminatory and completely unfair because we're being forced
to do more with less. As a result, we've seriously compromised
the health and safety of the people we are expected to serve.
"Departmental officials have now made the same arguments
that we've been making and it's pretty scary." The fact
that the government chose not to act on the warnings in the report
is very troublesome to the national chief.
"It isn't AFN. It isn't the national chief. It isn't regional
chiefs that are making these arguments. It's coming from within
the government. These people obviously don't have an axe to grind.
They're doing their jobs and they want to provide the best advice
to the minister," he said.
"Now we discover, and I didn't know this until I read this
document, that the minister was well informed. He was advised
that this was a serious situation and we were dealing with a
situation of crisis proportion. The end result of all this is
that on March 19 we were essentially ignored. That's further
compromising the health and safety of our people."
Fontaine hinted that the federal position on spending for First
Nations is part of a behind-the-scenes political fight. He said
the minister's public comments are designed to play to a certain
political constituency.
"For example, the argument that the government is spending
an awful lot of money and there needs to be value for the dollars
spent. We see that as code language and I've raised that with
Minister Prentice and I've asked him to refrain from making that
kind of assertion because it's discriminatory," he said.
"They don't say that about provincial governments and the
billions that are being transferred to provinces nor to the $17
billion that was committed to defense." Apparently, the
government will not raise funding until the chiefs agree to structural
changes in the way First Nations governments account for their
spending.
"We're not opposed to structural changes. We know that we
have to do some things differently and better. But we can't afford
to compromise the health and safety of our people," the
national chief said.
Fontaine said the Conservative position and the minister's public
comments play to the segment of the Canadian population that
is biased against First Nations.
"Of course. [Indian Affairs Minister Prentice's communications
officer] Deirdre McCracken keeps saying we can't afford to keep
pouring money down the funnel. As if money is being poured down
the funnel. That isn't so. What the facts tell us here is that
our communities are seriously under-funded and there isn't such
a thing as pouring money down the funnel and not getting value
for dollars," Phil Fontaine said.
By taking money away from First Nation and Inuit programming
to pay for the mainstream economic boom in the north, it almost
seems the Conservative government is attacking Aboriginal people,
he added.
"And I don't know why this is so. It seems that we're being
punished and I don't know why. I don't know what we did wrong,"
he said. "We've made some very serious overtures to the
Harper government to establish a respectful relationship where
we can actually do good things for First Nations people. And
we've done so over the last couple of months. And I can't claim
success. And I'm very disappointed."
Bill Rodgers, the Indian Affairs minister's director of communica-tions,
dismissed the leaked documents as out of date.
"The documents that have been circulated to the Winnipeg
Free Press and other publications in recent weeks are old and
pre-date the new govern-ment's first budget. Unlike the previous
government, Minister Prentice has taken a targetted approach
to First Nations funding, setting priorities in areas that include
water, housing, education, economic development and the acceleration
of the land claims process. Improvements in these areas will
go a long way to improving the overall quality of life of First
Nations residents," he said.
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