Letter from MMIWG inquiry points finger at Privy Council for delays in aftercare cash - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:07 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Letter from MMIWG inquiry points finger at Privy Council for delays in aftercare cash

The national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls says the reason some families and survivors have not received aftercare is because of funding delays from the Privy Council Office.

CBC News obtained letter sent to those who have not received funding after testifying at inquiry

Nicole Daniels was 16 years old when she died of hypothermia in 2009. Her aunt testified at the inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls. (Facebook)

The national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls says the reason some families and survivors have not received aftercare is because of funding delays from the Privy Council Office.

CBC News obtained a copy of a letter sent to people who have not received followup care after testifyingat the inquiry.

The letter, dated May 1 and signed by TerrellynFearn,the inquiry's director of community engagement and support services, calls the situation "unacceptable," and says the inquiry is working with the PCO to resolve the delay.

"We were phoning people;no one is calling us backemails, messages, nothing," said Joan Winning, who shared her late niece'sstory at the Winnipeg hearing lastOctober.

"This is causing more stress. They promised us aftercare and we are not getting anything."

Winning's niece Nicole Daniels was 16 years old when she was found face-down in the snow behind a car rental agency in east Winnipeg in 2009.

Her death was ruled not suspicious, but her family thinks she was killed. They said she got into a truck with an older man, who they believe gave her alcohol and took advantage ofher before leaving her in the cold.

Joan Winning said she had to cancel a ceremony in March because she had not yet received funding for aftercare for testifying at the MMIWG national inquiry. (Jeff Stapleton/ CBC)

Winnipeg police confirm officers interviewed the man she was last with the night before her body was found and that there was no evidence of a sexual assault or that the man had supplied her with any alcohol.

"[Aftercare] is really important because as far as I'm concerned we went through a lot, we were traumatized just like every other family," said Winning.

Winning said she had lined up a shake tent ceremony in her home community of Sagkeeng with an elder in March. She had to cancel it because she hadn't received her aftercare money.

Each person who testifies is entitled to $3,500 for their healing. According to the national inquiry's website, 1,273 families and survivors have testified.

Winning said she will use her money to give the elder an honorarium for her time and pay for travel and supplies, like tobacco and cloth for the ceremony.

"They wanted her to send them an invoice and I said ... well she is an elder, she's not a business," said Winning. "They clearly don't know what they're doing, what a ceremony is about."

The letter also stated the Privy Council Office further complicated access to aftercare by questioning if the national inquiry had the authority to deliver aftercare support.

Aftercare assistance for MMIWG families and survivors stalled in bureaucratic back-and-forth

6 years ago
Duration 1:56
The national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls says the reason some families and survivors have not received aftercare is because of funding delays from the Privy Council Office.

"This stalled our process to engage with families and survivors as fundingwas halted until the issue could be cleared up with Crown-Indigenous Relations," Fearn wrote in the letter.

Fearn said some temporarysolutions were found such as having third parties cover initial aftercare costs.

She said the PCO is now four weeks away from giving approval for aftercare plans already in the works, with funding released five to 10 days after that.

"However, the next challenge ahead of us is that we still don't have a clearly established approval timeline from the submission of the aftercare plan," she wrote.

CBCNews requested an interview with Fearn,but was asked to send a list of questions because staff are focused on an upcoming hearingnext week in Quebec on a human rights framework. The questions have not yet been answered, despite multiple attempts.

"I just hope it's not another tactic to spoil, to get people off their backs," said Winning. "It's one thing after another.They have reasons for everything, but they can't come up with the aftercare."

Winning and her family have another shake tent ceremony scheduled for the end of May. She said she has little hope her funding will come through in time and expects she will have to cancel again.

In an email to CBCNews, a spokesperson for the PCO said they havebeen working "collaboratively" with the inquiry to enhance aftercare supports.

"The granting of aftercare is a shared responsibility between the commission and the Privy Council Office and there are processes in place for the timely recommendation and approval of funding."

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content