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Today in Canada > News > Ottawa offers over $35.5B for First Nations child welfare reform
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Ottawa offers over $35.5B for First Nations child welfare reform

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Last updated: 2025/12/22 at 3:51 PM
Press Room Published December 22, 2025
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Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government is presenting a new plan worth more than $35.5 billion to keep First Nations children connected to their communities, culture and families.

The offer is less than the $47.8 billion presented by former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s government but it contains a key difference: a $4.4-billion annual commitment starting in 2033-34 after the initial $35.5 billion is spent.

Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty shared the details with CBC News before making the announcement in Ottawa on Monday — the day her government’s plan to reform the on-reserve child welfare system is due to be submitted at the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. 

“Every day that we continue to try to define what an agreement looks like or trying to determine through legal measures how you’re going to stop discrimination is another day that a child is in care,” Gull-Masty said.

“If we’re going to really address that, it has to be in creating a system where a child is in care surrounded by their community, by those that they know, by those that love them, by those that are going to teach them their culture, their identity, their language.”

But the government’s plan isn’t the only one the tribunal is considering.

WATCH | Ottawa, First Nations file separate child welfare reform plans:

First Nations group prepping competing proposal for child welfare reform

The federal government will soon submit a plan to reform First Nations child welfare to the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, but First Nations leaders and child welfare advocates are attempting to prepare their own competing proposal.

A group of First Nations chiefs and children’s advocates, known as the National Children’s Chiefs Commission, is filing a competing proposal with a bigger price tag. It estimates the cost to fix First Nations child and family services is closer to $50 billion over 10 years, well above what the government is offering.

The commission was directed by the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) to develop a First Nations-led plan after chiefs rejected the $47.8 billion offer from the Trudeau government last year, over concerns the money wasn’t guaranteed and would be subject to annual reviews.

National agreement, regional approaches

The submissions are being made nearly a decade after the tribunal issued a landmark ruling that found Ottawa racially discriminated against First Nations children by underfunding First Nations Child and Family Services, and ordered an end to the discrimination. 

The proposals also come almost 20 years following a joint human rights complaint made by the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society in 2007.

If the tribunal approves Ottawa’s plan, Gull-Masty said the more than $35.5 billion in funding will be secured in a legal order to ensure it’s protected from future changes in government and will be made available right away. 

She said the government has not taken away the $47.8 billion previously on the table because it has been drawing from those funds to pay for services at a cost of approximately $4.4 billion per year. 

Prime Minister Mark Carney promised significant additional funding for First Nations child welfare reform at the special chiefs assembly in Ottawa.
AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak looks on as Prime Minister Mark Carney responds to a question at the Assembly of First Nations Special Chiefs Assembly in Ottawa on Dec. 2, 2025. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The government is pitching a national reform plan but looking to strike regional agreements with First Nations entities so they can tailor the delivery and funding of services to their distinct realities, Gull-Masty said. 

Under the proposal, she said communities will determine their standard of care.

“I believe the community needs to drive the decision-making, needs to drive what they’re going to establish in their First Nation, because it is defined according to their identity,” Gull-Masty said. 

So far, seven regions have expressed interest in pursuing regional deals with the government, according to Gull-Masty. 

She said she hopes to have all regional agreements in place by September 2026. Any community that doesn’t come forward to strike a deal will fall under the national agreement, she added. 

Announcement personal for minister

The work hits close to home for Gull-Masty, who was elected as the first female grand chief of the Cree Nation Government in Quebec before entering federal politics.  

“Just because I’m in this position doesn’t mean that I don’t know the personal experience of seeing children in my own family go into care,” Gull-Masty said.

“Trying to help them, trying to make those decisions for them — that’s something very personal to me.”

Although there are two plans being submitted to the tribunal, Gull-Masty said she still wants to work with the National Children’s Chiefs Commission.

“This discussion is not about this plan or that plan,” she said. “This discussion is about which path do you want to take, and how can we close that gap in working together.”

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