Indian status coming for thousands of Canadians
Last Updated: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 | 10:42 PM AT
CBC News
More than 45,000 Canadians could be recognized as status Indians under changes the federal government plans to make to the Indian Act, CBC News has learned.
The changes come after Ottawa lost a court challenge addressing the different ways that men and women are treated when it comes to Indian status under the Indian Act.
In 1985, Ottawa changed the rules for women who married non-natives. They would retain their status, as would their children, but not their grandchildren.
The rules are different, however, for Indian men. A man who married a non-native can pass status to two generations
Last year's court decision has prompted the government to extend Indian status for one more generation. This means grandchildren of such a union will now have native status, but not great-grandchildren.
Carol Scott, whose grandmother was a status Indian, said her grandmother lost that recognition when she married a non-aboriginal man.
The marriage meant that her grandmother and her children couldn't live on reserve and were denied health and education benefits.
But Scott, who's from Manitoba, said that it's more an issue of identity.
"It's almost like you're lost, you're in limbo. You don't know where you belong anymore. And that's so important to belong," she said.
Scott said the government's amendment is as good start.
"We want what belongs to us. It's our birthright. I'm an aboriginal person, I'm proud of it and I want my son to be proud of it, too."
Scott wants the proposed amendments extended so her son will be eligible to become a status Indian as well.
Wanda Wuttnee, who heads the native studies department at the University of Manitoba, said that she's in the same situation as Scott and that the government needs to go further.
"They haven't corrected it yet with this decision. It didn't remove the barriers. My children cannot pass status to their children. So yes, there's still a problem."
Shawn Atleo, the head of the Assembly of First Nations, said it's a question of who has the right to define citizenship.
"And so here we are again with potentially the federal government acting in isolation and unilaterally in defining who is or who isn't a member of a community when it really rightfully belongs to the indigenous nations to do so."
Still, Atleo said he welcomes any changes that make the rules fairer for aboriginal women and their descendants.
With files from Karen PaulsShare Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Budworm outbreak poses $1B threat to N.B. forests
- Forest scientists are warning a bug that first troubled New Brunswick forests 40 years ago is on the brink of another outbreak. more »
- New potato targets diabetics, dieters
- Potato breeders in New Brunswick are creating a tuber to help diabetics and dieters. more »
- Pension trustee takes stand in defamation suit
- A high-profile lawsuit against a former Saint John city councillor over allegedly defamatory comments he made about the city's pension board continued Wednesday with a former long-time city financial officer and board member on the stand. more »
- Half of Canadians report being bullied as youth
- Half of Canadian adults polled say they were bullied as children or teenagers — and 62 per cent of those bullied say having an adult mentor would have helped them cope. more »
Top News Headlines
- Tories move to curb 'bogus' refugees
- The Conservative government is poised to change the refugee system yet again in an attempt to deter what it considers "bogus" claimants, CBC News has learned. more »
- Children of immigrants challenged at school, home
- By 2016, foreign-born youth and Canadian-born youth from immigrant families will make up a quarter of the country's population, according to predictions by the Canadian Council on Social Development. As their numbers grow, more attention is being paid to their successes and failures. more »
- 2 NDP MPs back final Commons vote to kill gun registry
- Two NDP MPs broke party ranks to vote with the government in the final House of Commons vote on scrapping the long-gun registry. more »
- B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens
- Two teenagers cried as they testified at the trial of a B.C. woman who was charged after a teen died while her son was hosting a party at her house in 2008. more »
- Bodyguard hired for bully victim in Fredericton
- Police tight-lipped on suspicious hospital death
- Fredericton Police warn of bank scam
- Special needs cats hold Valentine's Day Skype date
- Police ID body found on Kingston Peninsula
- Saint John mulls cutting pension guarantees
- Parking shortage at Moncton Hospital
- CUPE questions Horizon's use of parking funds
- SWN may get frosty reception, says mayor

