First Nation student safety focus of meeting in Thunder Bay - Action News
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First Nation student safety focus of meeting in Thunder Bay

Leaders from remote communities in northern Ontario are hoping Tuesday's meeting with school boards, police and other service providers in Thunder Bay will help keep First Nations students safe in the city.

Loneliness of teens separated from families fuels trouble, NAN Deputy Chief Goyce Kakegamic says

Leaders from remote communities in northern Ontario are hoping a meeting today with school boards, police and other service providers in Thunder Bay will help keep First Nations students safe in the city.

An inquest, expected to start in the fall, will lookinto thedeaths of seven First Nations youth whodied while attending school in Thunder Bay.

Meanwhile chiefs want to build partnerships with local agenciesto ensure all young people are safe and healthy, said Nishnawbe Aski Nation Deputy Grand Chief GoyceKakagamic.

"When any youth are in danger, in trouble or in crisis it is, to me, a broader societal problem," Kakegamic said. "These issues do not exist in isolation."

Nishnawbe Aski Nation, representing 49 First Nations in northern Ontario, is acting on a resolution passed by chiefs in February, he said.

An invitation letter sent from Kakegamicto service providers in Thunder Bay reads:"NAN is inviting our community partners together for a discussion of identified issues including but not limited to:

  • Positives - Education opportunities, First Nations Trade School, economic development, training
  • Prevention Strategies Addiction Issues, trafficking and abuse of narcotics and prescription drugs
  • Community Safety - Racism, gangs, access to services, orientation for newcomers
  • Homelessness Overcrowding, access to housing

Lakehead University,Confederation College,the public and Catholic school boards, the Salvation Army, Shelter House, the Ontario Provincial Police, Thunder Bay police and the city of Thunder Bay were among the invitees, Kakegamic said.

First Nations students will also attend to share some of their experiences and help others understand the challengesthey face when they arrive in the city.

"These people have to leave their families and then, when you're lonely, you sometimes get side-tracked to go into other activities, into danger," Kakegamic said.