The federal budget took steps toward racial justice but activists say more must be done - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:36 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

The federal budget took steps toward racial justice but activists say more must be done

Advocates for Black, Chinese, South Asian and other racialized Canadians say the federal budget takes a number of positive steps toward building a more inclusive country, but more work needs to be done to address systemic racism in Canada.

Budget allocates funding for Black communities, race-based data action plan

Anti-racism demostrators take a knee near Toronto Police Headquarters during a march on Saturday, June 6, 2020. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Advocates for Black, Chinese, South Asian and other racialized Canadians say the federal budget takes a number of positive steps toward building a more inclusive country, but more work needs to be done to address systemic racism in Canada.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled the Liberal government's first budget in two years on Monday. The budget proposesmassive amounts ofspending to contend withthe uneven impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and pledges to create a million jobs within a year by funding an inclusive, equitable economic recovery.

To address systemic racism, the document sets aside $11 million over two yearsto expand the activities of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, a non-profit Crown corporation tasked withcombatingracial discrimination.

The budget wouldallocate $200 millionto Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC), a federal department, to establish a Black-led Philanthropic Endowment Fund to combat anti-Black racism and improve social and economic outcomes in Black communities. Another $100 million would go to ESDC to support Black-led non-profit organizations.

The budget also pledges $172 million over five years to Statistics Canada to implement an action plan to improve the collection of disaggregated, race-based data to fill knowledge gaps about racialized Canadians.

"Canada can and will do more to support racialized communities, improve understanding of racial inequities and barriers, build a more diverse and inclusive federal public serviceand work with partners to build a more equal and just future," the budgetdocument reads.

Stimulating an equitable recovery

In a news release, Colour of Poverty-Colour of Change a network of groups in Ontario that representracialized Canadians from Black, Asian, South Asian, Arab, Hispanic and immigrant communities, among others praised parts of the budget, including funding for the Black community, the plan to build a national child care system and the race-based data strategy.

"The 2021 federal budget contains some solid first steps towards building a more inclusive Canada," the group said. "But we are disappointed it falls short of demonstrating a consistent and coherent commitment to addressing systemic racism."

WATCH | What systemic racism looks like in Canada:

What systemic racism in Canada looks like

4 years ago
Duration 9:56
The police killing of George Floyd and the protests that followed have brought renewed attention to systemic racism. In Canada, some have been quick to deny its existence. But these experts say racism has been normalized within Canadian institutions.

The group said it wants to see stronger "employment equity" conditions attached to much of the $101 billion in stimulus spending.

"I have a concern there about how that stimulus will flow and will it really reach if you don't attach conditions to it the communities that are the most deeply impacted by systemic racism in the workplace," said Shalini Konanur, executive director of the South Asian Legal Clinic in Torontoand a member of Colour of Poverty-Colour of Change.

The pandemic's impact onracialized Canadians

Statistics Canada data showthat people from racialized communities have lost jobs at higher rates than otherCanadians over the course of thepandemic.

While the national unemployment rate for people aged 15 to 69 was 11.3 per cent in July 2020, it was 17.8 per centamong South Asian Canadians, 17.3 per cent among Arab Canadiansand 16.8 per centamong Black Canadians, according to the July Labour Force Survey.

Even as the economy slowly recovers, the more recent March Labour Force Surveyfound the unemployment rate amongall visible minority groups was 9.4 per cent, but 7.5 per centfor the rest of the population.

Freeland's budget acknowledgesthat people from racialized communities are among those hardest hit by the pandemic. It says a "a rapid and sustained economic recovery" is the best way to bring back jobs and narrow income disparities.

Konanur said stimulus funding should include conditions on hiring, promotion and training programs that specifically target racialized Canadians so they can get back to work.

"It is really about ensuring equity in the way the money is used," said Konanur.

People take part in an anti-racism rally in Ottawa on Friday, June 5, 2020. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Colin Lynch, co-founder of the Black Opportunity Fund, said the proposed investments in ESDC will go a long way in supporting Black Canadians who have experienced direhealth, economic and justice outcomes becauseof systemic racism.

"Having programs and having funding that is dedicated to a community that has been overlooked for decades will take a fantastic step in the direction that we need to go as a community," said Lynch.

But Lynch said his organization a partnership of businesses, philanthropists, foundationsand the Black community had been calling for $800 million for the endowment fund.

More needed for anti-racism work, advocate says

Amy Go, president of the advocacy group the Chinese Canadian National Council for Social Justice, called the $11 million boost in funding for the Canadian Race Relations Foundation whose work she supports a "drop in the bucket."

Go said she is disappointed the budget doesn't include a similar boost for the federal government's anti-racism secretariat, particularly in light of thealarmingrise in anti-Asian racist actssince the pandemic began.

Amy Go, the president of the Chinese Canadian National Council for Social Justice, said she is disappointed the budget didn't include a boost in funding for the federal government's anti-racism strategy. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The federal government established the Federal Anti-Racism Secretariatin 2019 to implement its anti-racism strategy. The government committed $46 million over three years to the initiative, meant to address systemic racism in federal policies and programs, empower communities of colour and raise public awareness.

"Communities have been asking for a lot more in terms of dedicated and devoted commitment to address systemic racism experienced by Asian communities," said Go.

"Why wouldn't you enhance that to ensure that Asian Canadians and other racialized communities would not go through what we have gone through?"

In a statement, a spokesperson for Freelandpointed to other measures in the budget to help racialized Canadians,including more funding forBlack entrepreneurs, forunderrepresented groups needingaccess toventure capital, for better legal accessand for improving diversity in the public service.

"Our government will continue to be there for Canadians including Black and racialized Canadians as we have been since the start of the pandemic," said KatherineCuplinskas.


For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)