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Aboriginal leaders get seat "near the table".


Three national Aboriginal leaders were invited to the provincial premiers' preparatory session on health issues on July 28. Two others were not.

Assembly of First Nations (AFN AFN Assembly of First Nations
AFN American Forces Network
AFN Ancestral File Number (FamilySearch genealogy records)
AFN Alesco Financial Inc (stock symbol)
AFN Alaska Federation of Natives
) National Chief Phil Fontaine Larry Phillip (Phil) Fontaine, OM, (born September 20, 1944) is an Aboriginal Canadian leader. He is currently serving his third term as National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. , Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami The Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ᐃᓄᐃᑦ ᑕᐱᕇᑦ ᑲᓇᑕᒥ) is an organization in Canada that represents over 40,000 Inuit. It was founded in 1971 as the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada (or in English, Inuit Brotherhood).  (ITK) President Jose Kusugak Jose Kusugak (2 May, 1950 - ) is an Inuit politician from Repulse Bay, Nunavut, Canada. He moved, along with his family, to Rankin Inlet in 1960.

After attending school in both Chesterfield Inlet and Churchill, Manitoba he went to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan to attend high
 and the Metis Metis (mē`tĭs), in astronomy, one of the 39 known moons, or natural satellites, of Jupiter.

Metis

goddess of caution and discretion. [Rom. Myth.: Wheeler, 242]

See : Prudence
 National Council (MNC MNC

See: Multinational corporation
) President Clement Chartier were invited. Native Women's Association of Canada The Native Women's Association of Canada, or NWAC, is an organization in Canada that represents Aboriginal women, particularly First Nations and Métis women.[1] Inuit women are represented by the separate organization, Pauktuutit.  President Terry Brown and Congress of Aboriginal Peoples The Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP) is a Canadian aboriginal organization, whose stated goal is to represent Canadian aboriginals (First Nations and Metis) who do not live on Indian reserves, whether this be an urban, rural or wilderness setting. It was founded in 1971.  (CAP) national chief Dwight Dorey were not. Dorey attended anyway.

Each of the Aboriginal leaders in attendance was asked for input and then briefed by the premiers on what they plan to propose to Prime Minister Paul Martin when the first ministers meet in Ottawa from Sept. 13 to 15. The hope is that the leaders will be able to bash out a new federal/provincial arrangement for health funding.

Dorey was asked if he got an answer about why he was not invited.

"It's the same old games. AFN stuff," he said, adding that he was told that the chiefs' organization is telling the premiers that it represents the people CAP purports to represent--off reserve and non-status Indians.

"I got wind that [the other Aboriginal organizations] were at the premiers' meeting so I informed them I was coming and expected to get equal treatment," he said.

"I was taken aback when I learned through the media that AFN, ITK and MNC had gone on their own, excluding myself and NWAC NWAC Northwest Airlines (stock symbol)
NWAC Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center (NOAA)
NWAC Native Women's Association of Canada (Ottawa, ON, Canada) 
," he said. "Now I'm hearing that, in relation to the upcoming meeting of the first ministers on health, that AFN in particular is trying to scuttle the participation of CAP again."

As of Windspeaker's publication deadline on Sept. 1, AFN officials had not received a formal invitation to participate in the first ministers' health meeting, despite a promise from the prime minister that first peoples First Peoples
Noun, pl

Canad a collective term for the Native Canadian peoples, the Inuit and the métis
 would have a full seat at the table on issues of concern to them.

If the Aboriginal organizations are not invited to the meeting, Martin will have some explaining to do.

"From our vantage point, we will ensure a full seat at the table--as we have ensured today--to all Aboriginal communities and leaders," Martin said in his opening speech at the Aboriginal roundtable on April 19. "No longer will we in Ottawa develop policies first and discuss them with you later. This principle of collaboration will be the corner-stone of our new partnership."

In Niagara-on-the-Lake, it was the first time the leaders of the three constitutionally recognized Aboriginal groups were included in formal talks with the premiers.

In the past, Aboriginal leaders--most notably former national chief Ovide Mercredi Ovide William Mercredi (born January 30, 1946, in Grand Rapids, Manitoba) is an Aboriginal Canadian politician. He is Cree and a former national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.

Mercredi attended the University of Manitoba and graduated with a degree in law in 1977.
 in the early 1990s--have protested their exclusion from such meetings outside the doors that were closed to them. AFN political staffers are claiming that Phil Fontaine has broken new ground in convincing the premiers that he and the other Aboriginal leaders should be at the table. Fontaine and his executive members have met with and lobbied just about every provincial premier over the last several months. Two premiers, P.E.I.'s Pat Binns Patrick George Binns (born October 8, 1948 in Weyburn, Saskatchewan), is a Canadian diplomat who was named Ambassador to the Republic of Ireland on August 30, 2007.[1]  and N.W.T.'s Joe Handley Joseph "Joe" L. Handley, MLA, (born August 9, 1943, Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan) is a former teacher and civil servant and was the tenth premier of the Northwest Territories, Canada. Early life
Handley was born in Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan.
, attended the AFN's annual general meeting in Charlottetown in mid-July.

"This is a major, major victory for Phil Fontaine," said one AFN official. But Dwight Dorey said the plan is to have Aboriginal leaders meet with first ministers the day before the health meeting, thereby excluding them again from the main stage.

"It can only be seen as "a seat near the table," one technician admitted.

Still, there may be political announcements coming in a month or two about major changes to Canada's health system. A meeting at the official level has been scheduled for January 2005 in Yellowknife that could lead to changes for First Nation and Inuit health care provision. Northwest Territories Northwest Territories, territory (2001 pop. 37,360), 532,643 sq mi (1,379,028 sq km), NW Canada. The Northwest Territories lie W of Nunavut, N of lat. 60°N, and E of Yukon.  Vice-chief Bill Erasmus reported to the chiefs in Charlottetown on July 20 that he and other AFN officials will sit down with representatives of Health Canada's First Nation and Inuit Health Branch to, essentially, take a look at reconstructing the entire process from scratch.

"The federal government has agreed to sit down and do a financial analysis of the First Nation and Inuit Health Branch. I'm convinced the money can be spent in a better way. The system is flawed but we're not the ones who designed it," he told the chiefs.

Erasmus said the AFN sits on 38 health-related committees.

"It's not the most productive way to deal with the funding," he added. "And there's huge money involved in pharmaceuticals and transportation and other areas, but I'm not convinced that money is spent in the best way."

It may well be that an increase in spending is not required if the system is made more efficient, he said.

"I'm not convinced we need more money," he said. "I think we have to analyze how services are being provided, then we can identify any possible shortfalls."

He said the envelope system used by Health Canada--where each region gets a set amount of money each year to provide health care--is not working.

"It's not based on need. It doesn't work. It just doesn't make sense. It's almost like it was designed to fail," he said.

Saying health care is the AFN executive's first priority, Erasmus added that he sees it as very important that the extent of treaty and Aboriginal rights as they pertain to health care be defined in detail.

First Nations and the federal government disagree on the government's obligation to provide health care to First Nation people. Erasmus said coming to a final agreement on that item would allow progress in other areas.

By Paul Barnsley

Windspeaker Staff Writer

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ONT Optical Network Terminal
ONT Ontario Northland Railway
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COPYRIGHT 2004 Aboriginal Multi-Media Society of Alberta (AMMSA)
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Title Annotation:News; first ministers' health meeting
Author:Barnsley, Paul
Publication:Wind Speaker
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:934
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