A scathing report outlining how Manitoba government agencies failed to help 15-year-old Tina Fontaine in the weeks before her death isnât surprising to Indigenous child advocates.
Indigenous people and their children often feel like theyâre âjust pushed aside,â Mama Bear Clan member Samantha Chief told Âéśš´ŤĂ˝ Channel. She said Indigenous youths being neglected by government services was a part of their âday-to-day lives of not being recognized when we cry out for help.â
âShe was a human being [who] deserved respect that she didnât get,â said Chief, whose women-led, volunteer group patrols Winnipeg streets helping at-risk youth.
Childrenâs advocate Daphne Penrose says in her report that the province systematically failed Fontaine. It found that the girl had reached out for help multiple times to different agencies in the weeks before she was found dead in a river in August 2014.
Manitoba's Child Advocate's found that Fontaine was essentially left homeless and was at risk for sexual exploitation. The report also makes five recommendations which include a plan to address children's mental health and a new response for at-risk and sexually exploited youth.
But Chief is skeptical, saying past plans have been âego-ledâ and hadnât come âfrom the heart.â She says she prays âevery day that someone is going to come in and [take] all the wrongs and make them right somehow.â
âIâm still in awe of all these talks and all these things that are happening [which] arenât doing anything to benefit the children here,â Chief said, adding that Child and Family Services had failed her too as a child.
Without mentioning specific programs, she criticized their lack of funding, as well as the temporary nature of other programs -- which Chief described as âquick Band-Aids.â
When people are âdown in their lowest point,â Chief says thatâs when itâs vital that services âcome from a place of love and compassion.â
'Groups need to act in unison'
In an interview on CTVâs âPower Play,â Cindy Blackstock, executive director of First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, stressed that the welfare of Indigenous children goes beyond just a âgroup of people in an office.â
âItâs the people in the schools, itâs the mental health workers ⌠the medical doctors, itâs police services and itâs child welfare services -- all of those groups need to act in unison,â she said. âCanada has not gone the distance in terms of really prioritizing childrenâs care.â
The new report urged schools to reform suspension and expulsion policies for at-risk youths and Blackstock said school administrators canât ignore when an Indigenous youth goes days missing school.
âThere needs to be a better alarm system to say, âHey, whatâs going on with this kid?â she said.
âHow can we intervene with other service providers to make sure that something isnât happening to [girls] -- as what was happening to Tina [who] was being sexually exploited by predator after predator,â Blackstock said.
'Help needs to be there, right now'
According to the new report, one of the more damning instances of neglect included how, despite Fontaineâs father being brutally murdered when she was 12, she didnât receive any grief counselling.
âCanada seems to be pretty lackluster when it comes to some of the most basic things that you think would be in place for a child whoâs experienced that kind of trauma in her life,â Blackstock said.
âThat help needs to be there, right now,â she said. âItâs not like âmake an appointment six, eight weeks done the line.â We need to have real interventions that are available to youth at risk right at the moment.â
She echoed the thoughts of Penrose, who told reporters, âWe have to make sure [youth] have access to timely treatment.â
âAnd when they come in and they say theyâre ready, we need to be able to say, âCome with me. Iâve got you.â And right now, we canât say that,â she said in Powerview-Pine falls, Man.
"We have to also acknowledge the many other ... children and youth who are falling through the cracks of society's safety net just like Tina," she said.
Penrose said the government needs to act quickly because children and youth are still facing the same risks and getting the same responses.
With files from The Canadian Press