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Has Canada’s urban Indigenous population been forgotten amidst the coronavirus pandemic?

Organizations serving Indigenous people living off reserve are sounding the alarm about the growing needs of this vulnerable group and the sluggish response of government.

5 min read
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At the Nawican Friendship Centre in Dawson Creek, B.C., the annual Easter celebration became a takeout dinner amid COVID-19.


It is the ethos of friendship centres, a network of community hubs founded in the 1950s to help Indigenous people in towns and cities across Canada access vital services like food and employment, to never turn anyone away.

So it was “devastating” for Leslie Varley, the executive director of the B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres and a member of Nisga’a Nation, to put out a notice last week on social media, advising that the non-profit is “completely maxed out and we can’t help anybody else,” she said.

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Leslie Varley, executive director of the B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres, put out a notice last week, advising that the non-profit is “overcapacity, with reduced hours and no additional supports.”

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National Chief Robert Bertrand of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples, which represents more than 600,000 off-reserve status and non-status Indigenous peoples, said it’s “maddening” that nobody is taking care of the off-reserve population.

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Lorraine Whitman is president of the Native Women’s Association of Canada, which provides various supports to Indigenous women, both on and off-reserve, including violence prevention, child care and employment.

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Food hampers are prepped for delivery at Val-d’Or Native Friendship Centre in Quebec.

Rachel Mendleson

Rachel Mendleson is a Toronto-based investigative reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @rachelmendleson.

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