Canada must provide equitable funding for on-reserve policing, says First Nation lawsuit

Public safety minister working on legislation to declare First Nation policing an essential service

Image | Wilfred King

Caption: Wilfred King, chief of Kiashke Zaaging Anishinaabek (Gull Bay First Nation), speaking during a news conference in Ottawa, says it's filing a lawsuit against the federal government for inequitable funding of its police service. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

An Ojibway First Nation in northern Ontario has filed a lawsuit against the federal government alleging that chronic inequitable funding of its policing services has created a public safety crisis in the community.
"It happens more often than not where our officers couldn't execute an arrest because they had no backup in the community. In fact, there are times when offenders were basically allowed to commit crimes and walk away," Wilfred King, chief of Kiashke Zaaging Anishinaabek (KZA) (also known as Gull Bay First Nation), said during a press conference on Monday morning in Ottawa.
"It's a very dire situation," King added.
The statement of claim, filed Monday afternoon with the Federal Court, alleges, "First Nation policing services have been systematically and chronically underfunded, endangering First Nation [officer and community] safety."
The federal government has 30 days to file a statement of defence with the Federal Court.
It's the latest move adding pressure on Ottawa to ensure equitable funding and adequate policing services in Indigenous communities across the country, something the federal government says it is working toward.

Often no police protection in KZA

There are currently only two active police officers in Kiashke Zaaging, King said, which means there are often times when there is no police protection.
The officers often work alone, and sometimes they have to request backup support from Ontario Provincial Police detachments, which don't always respond to those calls, he said.
"In a recent incident, we had a violent offender in the community and the police would not respond because they could not get the necessary backup," King said, adding he worries for their safety.

Image | Chantelle Bryson

Caption: Chantelle Bryson, legal counsel for Kiashke Zaaging Anishinaabek (Gull Bay First Nation), speaks during a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday, as King looks on, about filing a legal action against Canada for inequitable funding of First Nation police services. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Chantelle Bryson, a lawyer representing the First Nation, said the officers are working without adequate resources, including no cell or satellite phone access, and no police station or support staff, and they receive lower pay than other officers in Ontario.
"We have officers in KZA that don't have housing. We have one officer that was driving back and forth three hours each way from Thunder Bay, and another officer who sleeps on a friend's couch," Bryson said.
She said the federal government continues to invest its money elsewhere, instead of supporting the self-determination of First Nations and responding to recommendations set out by national inquiries, like the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls report published in 2019.
"KZA will not wait to become a lawless enclave," she said.

Funding of First Nations policing a key issue

Unlike non-Indigenous communities across Canada where policing operates as an essential service, under the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program (FNIPP), funding agreements are negotiated between the communities, Public Safety Canada and the province.
There are currently 35 First Nations police services and one Inuit police service in Canada(external link), with most located in Ontario and Quebec.
Lennard Busch, executive director of the First Nations Chiefs of Police Association, said the legal challenge launched by KZA speaks to the mounting frustration about how First Nations policing services are funded and administered.
"We certainly have been for quite awhile now pushing to eliminate some of the disparity between self-administered First Nations police services and mainstream policing," he told CBC News.
Funding has been a key issue, causing conditions that put both the communities and the police officers at risk, Busch said, but there is momentum toward declaring the service essential and providing equitable funding.
In January 2022, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruled the Canadian government was discriminating against the Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation(external link), located 260 kilometres north of Quebec City, by chronically underfunding the Mashteuiatsh Police Service.
In the fall, Public Safety Canada released a report about the FNIPP detailing considerable problems highlighted during public consultations, and Minister Marco Mendicino has consistently reaffirmed his commitment to introducing new legislation this year.
The department did not respond to questions from CBC News about the legislation or about KZA's concerns by deadline.
Busch said his organization, along with the Assembly of First Nations, have been supporting the consultations and the development of the legislation, and is cautiously optimistic about it.
"A lot of stuff we've heard before and then it just kind of died," Busch said.
"Hopefully this will change a lot of things in terms of how we resource First Nation police services, how we support them, how we fund them and how we regulate them."
But Wilfred King said he doesn't know what's in that long-promised legislation, and his First Nations police force needs sufficient resources and funding now.
"We cannot wait for that legislation," he said.