AFN Press Release ...
OTTAWA, Jan. 15 - Today's release of the 2006 Census by Statistics Canada indicates that the population of First Nations people has increased by 29 per cent in the last decade.
"The First Nations population is growing 3.5 times faster than the Canadian population," says National Chief Phil Fontaine. "More than half of the people in our communities are school age or under the age of 25. First Nations young people are a key component of Canada's present and future workforce. They need education, training and jobs. Canada is facing critical labour shortages in all sectors. Like it did with the recent financial aid package for single-industry towns, the federal government needs to work with the Assembly of First Nations now to determine what immediate investments are required that will ensure that all Canadians can access the enormous untapped potential of our First Nations people and communities. Investing in First Nations is investing in Canada's future."
"The 2006 Census highlights the fact that the booming First Nations population can become a double win or a double-whammy to Canada's economic and social future. With immediate and ongoing new investments by the federal government in basic areas of critical need like schools, education, training, employment, housing and water quality, our young population will have a bright future and contribute to Canada's future workforce and productivity. If the government neglects to make those needed investments, Canada will be forced to bear increased social costs resulting from First Nations poverty and decreased productivity," added National Chief Fontaine. "It's hard to learn if your school is falling down around you."
The Census figures also underscore the need for the federal government to make more investments in housing for First Nations people because they are five times more likely to live in crowded homes. The situation is even worse for those living in First Nations communities. The proportion of homes requiring major repairs has increased by 44 per cent in the last decade.
"First Nations are very concerned about being able to properly meet the needs of our young, rapidly growing population in key areas such as health, housing, education, training and jobs. The last 12 years of chronic under-funding by the federal government to core programs and services has caused serious hardship in many First Nations communities," added National Chief Fontaine.
"None of this data should come as a surprise to Canadian governments. The UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Freedoms of Indigenous peoples has drawn Canada's attention to the problems First Nations face. Concrete and effective solutions are required," said National Chief Fontaine.
"Statistics Canada made a noticeable improvement in its reporting by differentiating between Métis, First Nations and Inuit people in the 2006 Census. However, Statistics Canada confuses a key issue by combining non-status with status Indians in the majority of its tables to indicate that more First Nations people are living off reserve and in urban centres. That number is very misleading because it includes 'non registered Indians' who are not members of First Nations communities or Indian bands and would likely not live on Indian reserves in any event," said National Chief Fontaine.
"In addition, the Government of Canada's Indian Registry indicates that more than 200-thousand status Indians are not included in the 2006 census. This discrepancy of more than 25 per cent is potentially harmful and could have serious negative impacts on future policy and economic decisions if it is not properly taken into account," concluded National Chief Fontaine.
The Assembly of First Nations is the national organization representing First Nations citizens in Canada.
For further information: Josee Bellemare, Bilingual Communications Officer, (613) 241-6789 ext. 336, cell: (613) 327-6331, jbellemare@afn.ca;. Nancy Pine, Communications Advisor - Office of the National Chief, (613) 241-6789 ext 243, cell: (613) 298-6382, npine@afn.ca.
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OTTAWA, January 16, 2007 - Canada's native population has topped the million mark for the first time in the latest census, with slightly more than half the country's 1.2 million aboriginals living off reserve.
Fifty-four per cent who consider themselves North American Indian, Metis or Inuit live in or near urban areas, according to the 2006 national survey. That's up from 50 per cent in the census taken a decade previous, say figures released Tuesday by Statistics Canada.
But analysts say what appears to be a gradual urbanization of Canada's aboriginal population does not mean reserves are emptying. On the contrary, there has been net migration back to First Nations over the last 40 years.
And while many people enjoy good housing and jobs in cities, some of Canada's roughest streets are disproportionately home to aboriginals. Overwhelmed and under-funded agencies say it's a growing struggle to offer services ranging from job training and affordable rent to a bowl of soup.
"Locally our friendship centre is facing incredible funding pressures," says Susan Tatoosh, executive director of the Vancouver Aboriginal Friendship Centre in the city's notorious Downtown Eastside.
"We have over 1,000 people dropping in on a monthly basis. We keep stats."
"We have a constant turnover of staff, mainly because of burnout and leaving for better wages elsewhere."
Winnipeg leads the way with the largest native population of 68,380 or 10 per cent of its total. Edmonton is second with 52,100 or five per cent of its total, and Vancouver has 40,310 or two per cent.
Other cities with high proportions of native residents were Prince Albert, Sask., where native people account for 34 per cent of the population, along with Saskatoon and Regina with nine per cent each, says Statistics Canada.
Overall, the aboriginal share of Canada's population - 3.8 per cent - ranks second in the world to New Zealand. The Maori people account for 15 per cent of New Zealand's total, while indigenous people represent a two-per-cent share in the U.S. and Australia.
An estimated 698,025 people identified themselves as North American Indian in the 2006 census - a number lower than the 763,555 people counted in the government's official Indian Registry as of Dec. 31, 2006. This is in part because 22 First Nations, including Canada's largest Mohawk communities, shunned the census process.
Those reserves report births and deaths regularly through the federal Indian Registry and are generally suspicious of how census data might be used.
The most recent census finds that the proportion of status Indians living on reserve has held steady at about 45 per cent. The Indian Registry, by contrast, tells a different story.
It says there were 615 bands in Canada as of Dec. 31, 2006 with 763,555 members. Most of that total - 404,117 - lived on reserves, while 335,109 lived off reserve and 24,329 were on Crown land. The discrepancy between the registry and the census is explained in part by the First Nations who refused to take part in the national survey.
But the registry is also a more static reflection of birth, marriage and death, says Jane Badets of Statistics Canada. The census is a five-year snapshot of where aboriginal people primarily live, she added.
The Indian Registry along with census data are the prime sources of population data that help determine federal funds for native housing, education and health needs. Those agreements were historically negotiated between First Nations and the Crown.
There's a political twist to any suggestion that an increasing number of First Nations people are living off reserve. The federal Conservatives have increased focus on off-reserve needs, most visibly by aligning themselves politically with the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples. The congress purports to represent off-reserve people across Canada, but its membership is disputed by rival groups like the Assembly of First Nations that are more closely identified with reserves.
The congress was notably the only native political group to openly endorse the Tories in the last federal election. Some critics of Conservative aboriginal policy note efforts to increase individual housing and other rights as piecemeal undermining of collective native rights.
In any case, observers stress that the gradual growth of native urban populations does not mean a mass exodus from reserves. In fact, since the mid-1960s more people have returned to First Nations and there's been a good deal of "churn" back and forth, says Dan Beavon, director of strategic research for Indian Affairs.
Much of the urban aboriginal growth can be traced to second-and third-generation population increases of existing native enclaves.
But bigger factors include "out-marriage" of aboriginal people with non-natives, along with a spike in cultural pride, Beavon says. People in cities have shown a greater tendency to cite native ancestry or identity from one census to the next, he explained.
The latest census shows 1.7 million people reported having at least some aboriginal ancestry, up from 1.3 million in 2001 and 1.1 million in 1996.
Higher birth rates also play a role, especially on reserves. And there's the simple fact that more First Nations now fall within city boundaries because of amalgamation, Beavon says.
For example, at least 20 First Nations border the sprawling Vancouver area, he says. "Reserves and cities are not mutually exclusive."
Aboriginal people flock to cities for the same education and job opportunities as non-natives.
"This is not a uniquely Canadian phenomenon," says Fred Caron, assistant deputy minister in the federal office for Metis and non-status Indians.
"It's worldwide. No matter what region you go to, there are more indigenous people living in cities in every region of the world - and facing a lot of the same issues."
Decent housing, a job and schooling for their kids are the main hurdles for people making the huge cultural shift from remote reserves, Caron said in an interview.
"Those three things, if they line up right, point to success - especially education."
In the meanest parts of Vancouver, Winnipeg and Saskatoon the extent to which native people have fallen through social cracks is painfully obvious.
Yet critics say federal and provincial governments aren't doing nearly enough to help these relatively young and growing urban communities to succeed.
Caron points to the federal Urban Aboriginal Strategy, a $14 million-a-year effort to co-ordinate an array of native training, transition and support services in 12 cities. He says Ottawa has forged partnerships and drawn funding from provincial, local and private interests.
"It's a small strategy. It hasn't got a lot of money attached to it," he conceded. But there are success stories, such as the BladeRunners program that trains young native workers for jobs in Vancouver's construction trade.
Peter Dinsdale, executive director of the National Association of Friendship Centres, says there's a growing need for the most basic services in cities.
"We provide, disproportionately, poverty-type programs. Programs for children, young parents and their families, food banks, drug and alcohol counselling."
Dinsdale says that 117 friendship centres across the country tracked 1.3 million services offered to clients last year - up from 757,000 in 2002-03.
"It's growing exponentially."
And no one, he says, wants to take on the responsibility or the cost. "There's this huge jurisdictional war going on between the provinces and the federal government as to who has responsibility for urban aboriginal people. As a result, very little is getting done."
Prince Rupert, B.C. - 4,195 (32 per cent)
Thompson, Man. - 3,300 (24 per cent)
La Tuque, Que. - 3,200 (21 per cent)
Prince Albert, Sask. - 6,715 (17 per cent)
Terrace, B.C. - 2,900 (16 per cent)
Whitehorse - 3,085 (14 per cent)
North Battleford, Sask. - 2,250 (13 per cent)
Portage la Prairie, Man. - 2,375 (12 per cent)
Williams Lake, B.C. - 2,155 (12 per cent)
Yellowknife - 1,990 (11 per cent)
Sept-Iles, Que. - 2,905 (11 per cent)
-For the first time, more than one million Canadians identified themselves as aboriginal. The census counted 1,172,790 Indian, Metis and Inuit people.
-About 1.7 million Canadians reported having at least some aboriginal ancestry. Statistics Canada defines "aboriginal ancestry" as the ethnic or cultural origin of a person's ancestors, usually more distant than a grandparent.
-The aboriginal population increased 45 per cent between 1996 and 2006. The growth can be attributed to a number of factors: higher birth rates than the non-aboriginal population, more people identifying themselves as aboriginal, census enumerators got better co-operation from some reserves this time.
-The reported Metis population - those of mixed Indian and European ancestry - has almost doubled since the 1996 census. Those who identified themselves as Indian increased by 29 per cent, while the Inuit population went up 26 per cent.
-About four per cent of Canada's total population is aboriginal. That's the second highest total in the world, second only to New Zealand where the Maori make up 15 per cent of that country's population.
-Fifty-one per cent of the status Indian population lives off reserve, up from 50 per cent in 1996.
-More than half of the country's aboriginal people (54 per cent) live in urban areas. For those who don't live on reserves, the urban figure climbs to 72 per cent.
-Some of Canada's largest cities have significant aboriginal populations, including Winnipeg (10 per cent), Regina and Saskatoon (both nine per cent).
-The aboriginal population in Canada is considerably younger than the non-native citizenry, with a median age of 27 compared to 40. Almost half (48 per cent) of the aboriginal population is under the age of 25.
-The census indicates there's been some improvement in overcrowded housing conditions for aboriginals since 1996, but nearly one in four respondents said their homes were in need of major repairs.
-There has been a decline in the use and knowledge of Inuktitut, the major language of the Inuit, and less than three per cent of Metis under the age of 45 can speak an aboriginal language. But there are indications some First Nations groups are trying to retain their ancestral tongues: 12 per cent of those who spoke Cree in 2006 learned it as a second language.
0.1 - Prince Edward Island's proportion of the country's total aboriginal population. Only 1,730 people in P.E.I. identified themselves as aboriginal.
3.8 - The percentage of Canada's total population who identified themselves as aboriginal, the second highest proportion of any country in the world (to New Zealand's 15 per cent).
10 - Percentage of Winnipeg's population that is aboriginal, the highest of any major Canadian city.
11 - Percentage of aboriginal people who live in "crowded dwellings" - meaning there are more people than rooms in the home. The proporation among the non-native population is only three per cent.
12 - Percentage of the Inuit population under the age of five. For Canada's non-native population, only five per cent are age four or younger.
22 - Number of reserves excluded from the census because band officials would not permit enumeration or interupted the process before it was completed. In 1996, there were 77 incompletely enumerated reserves.
23 - Percentage of the aboriginal population who indicated their home was in need of major repair, meaning the dwelling had defective plumbing or wiring or had structural problems. Among all Canadians, the figure is only seven per cent.
29 - Percentage of First Nations who said they could carry on a conversation in an aboriginal language.
45 - Percentage increase in the aboriginal population between 1996-2006. The greatest increase was among the Metis population, which grew by 91 per cent during that period.
54 - Proportion of aboriginal people who live in urban areas. The number jumps to 72 per cent if you count those who don't live on reserves.
60 - The number of aboriginal languages recorded by census enumerators, with Cree spoken by more First Nation people than any other language.
81 - Percentage of First Nations who are considered status Indians because they are registered under the Indian Act.
50,485 - Number of people who identified themselves as Inuit.
389,785 - Number of people who identified themselves as Metis.
698,025 - Number of people who identied themselves as North American Indian.
1,172,790 - Total number of Canadians who identified themselves as aboriginal.
1.7 million - Number of Canadians who indicated they had some aboriginal ancestry in their family background.
Aboriginal population passes the one-million mark
54% of aboriginals live in urban areas
Aboriginals a young population
Aboriginal language shows gains and losses
Aboriginals a fast-growing, urban population, census shows
Get complete statistics for your community on Statistics Canada's Profiles page