Wrapping Our Ways: Indigenous Child Welfare Conference 2020


Course Date: May 21, 2020

Full Course Materials
Total: 8h 59min
Total Ethics: 2h

Thursday, May 21, 2020

9:00 am - 9:15 am
Welcome and Introduction

Romona Baxter, BSW Executive Director, Nzen’man’ Child and Family Development Centre, Lytton
Teresa Sheward  Program Lawyer, The Continuing Legal Education Society of BC, Vancouver

9:15 am - 10:30 am
Bill C92: Act Respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis Children, Youth and Families

  • overview
  • definitions
  • preamble

Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack

National Standards

    • best interests of the Indigenous child
    • conflicts
    • trauma informed practice
    • what difference will it make to follow national standards (including areas where there may be less than provincial laws)

Moderator: Romona Baxter, BSW Executive Director, Nzen’man’ Child and Family Development Centre, Lytton
Dr. Hadley FriedlandAssistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Dr. Sarah MoralesActing Director, JD/JID Program, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, Victoria

10:30 am - 11:00 am BREAK

11:00 am - 12:30 pm
Empowering Indigenous Jurisdiction and Laws

  • empowering provisions
  • procedure
  • limitations
  • interactions with other lawsIndigenous and Provincial/Territories

Moderator: Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack
Dr. Hadley FriedlandAssistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Dr. Sarah MoralesActing Director, JD/JID Program, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, Victoria
Crystal ReevesMandell Pinder LLP, Vancouver

12:30 pm - 1:30 pm LUNCH BREAK

1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
Best Interests of Indigenous Children and Tools to Empower Indigenous Community Involvement

Considering attachment in the long term

Dr. Peter ChoateProfessor, Child Studies and Social Work, Faculty of Health, Community and Education, Mount Royal University, Calgary

Costs of failing to ensure attachment to culture

Halie Kwanxwa'loga BruceCedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack

What should best interests mean in Indigenous contexts?

    • ways to keep children culturally connected to their Indigenous culture
    • empowering Indigenous community involvement: access orders; file review; complaints; voice of children and youthrole of Indigenous communities
    • tools/challenges to help Indigenous children/communities

Moderator: Romona Baxter, BSW Executive Director, Nzen’man’ Child and Family Development Centre, Lytton
Dawn JohnsonChildren and Families Policy Analyst for the First Nations Leadership Council, Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, Vancouver
Joanna RecalmaBarrister & Solicitor, Nanaimo

Friday, May 22, 2020

9:00 am - 10:30 am
Interaction Between Laws: Indigenous/Federal/Provincial or Territorial Child Welfare Laws

  • application of Provincial/Territorial laws to the point of conflict
  • differences or amended standards: notice; disclosure; placement; review; standards; other
  • areas where it may be good practice to pass laws as "catch alls" or address gaps in legislation in the interim while developing your own law

Dr. Sarah MoralesActing Director, JD/JID Program, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, Victoria
Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack

  • impact on delegated agencies

Dawn JohnsonChildren and Families Policy Analyst for the First Nations Leadership Council, Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, Vancouver
Dr. Sarah MoralesActing Director, JD/JID Program, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, Victoria
Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack

  • case study

Joanna RecalmaBarrister & Solicitor, Nanaimo

Moderator: Romona Baxter, BSW Executive Director, Nzen’man’ Child and Family Development Centre, Lytton

10:30 am - 11:00 am BREAK

11:00 am - 12:30 pm
Facilitators Round Table

  • identifying the opportunites and challenges in the new legislation
  • best opportunities and challenges

Romona Baxter, BSW Executive Director, Nzen’man’ Child and Family Development Centre, Lytton
Halie Kwanxwa'loga BruceCedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack
Dr. Hadley FriedlandAssistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Dawn JohnsonChildren and Families Policy Analyst for the First Nations Leadership Council, Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, Vancouver
Joanna RecalmaBarrister & Solicitor, Nanaimo
Crystal ReevesMandell Pinder LLP, Vancouver
Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack

12:30 pm - 1:30 pm LUNCH BREAK

1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
Planning to Empower Indigenous Jurisdiction

  • how to support re-empowering Indigenous Nations in articulating their own laws for child welfare
  • reflect ongoing laws based in their traditionsor a new iteration?
  • steps and considerations

Moderator: Ardith Walpetko We’dalx Walkem, QC Cedar and Sage Law Corporation, Chilliwack
Dr. Hadley Friedland
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Dr. Sarah MoralesActing Director, JD/JID Program, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, Victoria
Crystal Reeves
Mandell Pinder LLP, Vancouver