Bill S-3 Amendments to the Indian Act and the Never-Ending Battle for Equality for Indigenous Women
The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Indigenous and
Northern Affairs (INAN) is currently studying Bill S-3 An Act to Amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based
inequities). As its title suggests, this bill should eliminate the
remaining gender discrimination contained within the Indian Act’s registration and membership provisions – but it does
not. The Indian Act’s registration
provisions are already a complex mess of rules intended to legislate Indians
out of existence – and the government’s version of the bill does not make it any better.
http://www.pampalmater.com/category/bill-s-3/
http://www.pampalmater.com/category/bill-s-3/
However, the Senate heard from First Nations,
Indigenous and women’s advocacy organizations, Indigenous women, and legal
experts during their initial study of the bill and agreed with the consensus
opinion that the government’s bill falls short of eliminating gender
discrimination. They introduced an amendment that addresses the bulk
of the remaining discrimination – only to find the government fighting them all
the way.
Bill S-3 is now being studied in the House and the
government continues to defend their discriminatory version of the bill. We must continue to put pressure on Canada to address this long-standing injustice against Indigenous women and our children.
What
follows is a chronology that will help provide context for how we got here:
1968
– Mary Two-Axe Early (Kahnawake), formed the Indian Rights for Indian Women to advocate for gender equality in the Indian Act. Mary had married a non-Indian, lost her status, and her band attempted to evict her as a result.
Under older versions of the Indian Act, Indian women who married non-Indian men lost their
status, as did their children. By contrast, Indian men who married non-Indian
women kept their status and their non-Indian wives gained status –
ensuring their children also had status.
Mary’s advocacy help gain media attention on the issue
and the concurrent Royal Commission on the Status of Women included recommendations
to amend these discriminatory provisions.
1973
– Jeanette Corbiere-Lavell (Wikwemikong) and Yvonne Bedard (Six Nations) lost
their case at the Supreme Court of Canada which challenged the marrying out
provisions of the Indian Act. The Court held that the Bill of Rights, which guaranteed equality before the law, couldn’t
invalidate the Indian Act;
1974
– Native Women’s Association of Canada was formed to advocate for the rights of
Indigenous women including their exclusion from registration and band
membership due to Indian Act’s discriminatory "marrying out" rules (loss of Indian status/registration when an Indian woman
marries a non-Indian man);
1981
–
Sandra Lovelace (Tobique) [now Senator Sandra Lovelace-Nicholas] won her human
rights complaint at the United Nations against the discriminatory Indian Act rules;
1982
–
Former Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau helps patriate the Constitution, enacting the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which
includes section 15, an equality rights guarantee;
1985
–
Bill C-31 amends the Indian Act in response to the Lovelace case to restore Indian status
and band membership to Indigenous women who lost it through marrying out, but the women were re-instated under
section 6(1)(c), instead of full 6(1)(a) status and thus their entitlement to transmit status was more restricted than their Indian male counterparts. They could transmit status to their children [albeit only half status under section 6(2)] but not their grandchildren;
Section 6(1) status means you can pass on status to
your children regardless of who you marry/partner; section 6(2) status means
you cannot pass on status on your own - you must parent with another status
Indian or your children have no status.
1985-
2010
– Sharon McIvor (Lower Nicola Indian band) challenges the ongoing (residual)
gender discrimination in the Indian Act registration provisions and both trial
and appeal level courts agree it is discrimination. The Supreme Court of Canada
refuses to hear an appeal.
2010 – Bill C-3 amended the Indian Act in response to the McIvor case to remedy some aspects of
gender discrimination, but leaves much of the discrimination unaddressed. This
failed remedial legislation inspired more litigation.
2010 – Sharon McIvor immediately files a human rights petition in 2010 to the United Nations Human Rights Committee because of Canada’s failure to remedy all gender discrimination in Indian registration.
2015
–
Stephane Descheneaux, Susan Yantha and Tammy Yantha (Abenakis of Odanak) win
their discrimination claim at the Quebec’s Superior Court against the Indian Act’s registration provisions
that continue to discriminate between the descendants of Indian women and Indian men.
2016
–
Bill S-3 is introduced in the Senate
with the stated intention of “eliminating sex-based inequities” from
the Indian Act. Consensus from the
First Nations, Indigenous women, advocacy organizations and legal experts
called as witnesses before the Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples (APPA) is
that Bill S-3 does not eliminate all sex-based inequities.
While Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) and
Justice Canada (DOJ) claim that the bill is Charter
compliant (i.e., there is no more gender discrimination), the expert witnesses
highlight that the core of the gender discrimination is not addressed by the bill.
As a result, the Senate suspended consideration of the
bill and instructed INAC to seek an extension from the court so it could draft
a bill which did the job it claimed to be doing.
April 2017 - Lynn Gehl wins her discrimination complaint against INAC on the issue of unknown/unstated paternity which forces INAC to come up with additional amendments to Bill S-3 to address this as well;
2017
– Study of Bill S-3 continues in the
Senate and the same witnesses express the same concerns that INAC did not use
the court extension to draft amendments to eliminate all gender discrimination
in the Indian Act.
One of the core areas of concern is the failure of the
previous amendment (Bill C-3) to
remedy gender discrimination for Indian women born prior to 1951 – an issue
INAC referred to as “complex discrimination” best left for Phase 2 i.e., future
discussions.
Having little faith in the many Phase 2 promises from
past amendments, Indigenous women asked the Senate to amend Bill S-3 to
address all gender discrimination. To this end, Senator Marilou McPhedron
tabled the suggested amendment, referred to as “6(1)(a) all the way” which
would make entitlement to registration for those born prior to April 17, 1985 equal as between Indian men and
Indian women and their descendants – including those born pre-1951.
Letters of support for
this amendment have poured into the Senate and Minister’s office by First Nations,
First Nation organizations, women’s groups, individuals and families. Minister
Bennett responds by fear-mongering saying that this amendment could entitle 2
million people and insists that the government cannot act without consulting First Nations.
Key myths and facts about Bill S-3:
MYTH #1:
Bill
S-3
is Charter compliant and addresses
all known gender discrimination.
FACT:
Every time the federal government claims the Indian Act is Charter compliant, it has been proven wrong in court. Furthermore, although
their initial claim was that Bill S-3
addressed all known gender discrimination, Minister Bennett later admitted that “we are
not doing the whole thing in terms of discrimination”.
It should also be noted that the current Liberal
Justice Minister Jodi Wilson-Raybould defends this bill, yet when she was the
Regional Chief of the BC Assembly of First Nations she wrote a letter to
government saying that pre-1951 cut-off date was discriminatory and should be removed. It was also the former Liberal government that introduced the "6(1)(a)
all the way" amendment during debate on Bill C-3 study. They agreed with removing all the discrimination then, but not now.
MYTH #2:
Minister Bennett claims millions of new Indians will be registered if
this amendment passes.
FACT:
There are less than 900,000 registered Indians in
Canada. Remedying gender discrimination for Indian women who married out pre-1985 and entitling descendants of women to status on the same footing as descendants of Indian men, could not possibly result in 2 million new registrants. Many will have
passed away already, many will not apply and many already have status – they
would only be getting a higher level of status,but not adding new numbers. Every
time the Indian Act has been amended,
INAC has grossly over-estimated the numbers to manufacture fear and dissent. Sadly, but predictably, the AFN is also engaged in fear-mongering along the same lines as INAC.
No
one cared about registration numbers when Indian men and white women were being registered –
it only seems to be an issue now because its Indian women.
MYTH #3:
All these new registrations will cost too much money.
FACT:
Canada adds 800,000 new Canadians every year from new
births and new immigrants – all of whom are entitled to the full range of
social programs and benefits at double or triple what is paid to First Nations for the same services. A one-time addition to the Indian register will
not break the bank. More importantly, everyone is Canada is entitled to gender
equality – regardless of any potential costs. Further, INAC already testified
before Senate that they do not expect costs to increase for First Nations as
the majority of new registrants will live off reserve.
MYTH #4:
Canada needs time to consult with First Nations about
whether to amend the Indian Act to
eliminate gender discrimination.
FACT:
The issue of gender discrimination in the Indian Act (and how to remedy it) is not
a new issue. First Nations and Indigenous women’s organizations have been
engaged with INAC for many decades on how to amend the Indian Act. Consultations, engagement sessions, information
sessions and various discussion tables have been ongoing since before the 1985
amendments. Even if more than
forty years of consultation had not already taken place, and it has, the
government cannot legitimately consult on whether to continue to discriminate
against Indigenous women. It has a constitutional and fiduciary duty not to
discriminate.
This government has no choice legally but to remedy the discrimination.
This government has no choice legally but to remedy the discrimination.
MYTH #5:
It is ok to leave the issue of gender discrimination
for another day.
FACT:
Section 15 of the Charter
of Rights guarantees equality between men and women.
Section 35(4) of the Constitution Act, 1982 guarantees equality between Indigenous men
and women with regards to Aboriginal and treaty rights.
Section 3 of the Canadian
Human Rights Act prohibits discrimination in the provision of federal
programs and services on the basis of gender.
Article 44 of the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples guarantees equality
between Indigenous men and women for all the rights included in the Declaration
but specifically with regards to belonging to one’s Indigenous Nation.
Various international human rights bodies have long
recommended that Canada once and for all eliminate gender discrimination in the
Indian Act and even noted that it is one
of the root causes of murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls.
It is long past time that Canada finally amend the Indian Act and eliminate gender
discrimination in Indian registration. They do not need more court cases, UN
reports or a national inquiry to justify taking action.
At this point, it's simply a matter of political will.
Please use the following link to a template letter to
support these amendments.
i reviewed countless finances and policies from residential school timeframe. it was an instrument of global financial imperialist agenda. no joke, brit, aust, can, us, swiss, dutch. the banks netted them a healthy profit off our short term stimulus giving tl's as reminder of our ignorance. our "reconciliation" funded their wars :/ i dont think its possible to work with canada anymore.
ReplyDeleteBy the government turning a blind eye on S3 is no better then Cornwallis who gave blankets to the
ReplyDeleteIndigenous people with small pox in them.why do you drag your feet on this issue.equality for native women and there children.the part I said about Clornwallis is by indigenous women being murdered or missing and the government not looking in to it and not change the status of womens is so wrong.if you take away the indigenous women who will have the babies. Like I said .this is no better then Cornwallis.so get off your butt and fix it.thank you.