Overhaul funding for aboriginal special ed in Ontario, report urges
TORONTO — Funding special education for First Nations students from reserves in Ontario needs to be completely overhauled to provide stability and predictability, a report released Tuesday concludes.
The federally-funded report, which flows from a human-rights challenge launched in 2009, says the federal government must end its practice of “arbitrary and capped” funding.
“A new model is needed that is bottom-up, holistic, uncapped, flexible, eligible for carry-over between years, and indexed,” the report recommends. “A binding legal guarantee of adequate and equitable funding is critical to ensuring funding adequacy.”
The document is the result of a human-rights case launched by the Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation over what it called inadequate special education services for children living on reserves in the province. The case is on hold while First Nations and both levels of government try to devise solutions to the problems. An advisory body of the Chiefs of Ontario and Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada helped gather information for the report.


