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Childcare and distance a barrier to employment in First Nations community
Zoom in closer and you’ll find the province is riddled with freckles of dark blue, representing small communities with up to 40% unemployment. Start reading their names and you’ll see they’re places like Gold River, Indian Brook, Whycocomagh, Chapel Island —known in Mi’kmaq as Potlotek— and more.
Unemployment Rates in Nova Scotia
“We do it so we can employ our own people. Chief Terry’s vision is that we become self-sufficient,” says Paul.
On the other side of the province, distance is a much bigger obstacle.
Distance from Glooscap to Membertou
Imagine trying to figure out how to make this four and a half hour drive without a car. For many members of the Glooscap First Nation, traveling to Membertou is the only way to receive employment training.
Just drive from Glooscap to Hantsport can be tricky. “Hantsport is maybe a 6 minute drive, but it’s a long walk. The last time I took a taxi home it was about $28. So imagine spending $50 for a round trip, just to get groceries.”
The same difficulty applies when trying to get from Glooscap all the way to Membertou for training, “and then you’d also have to find somewhere to stay for 16 weeks,” says Francis.
Right now one of her priorities is finding funding to build and staff a daycare centre, “We had this really crazy baby boom. There used to be only 4 or 5 children running around the reserve. Now there’s about 20,” she says.
Recently they had a rare employment course on construction safety come right to their community. It was done in conjunction with Dexter construction and a couple members completed the course and got hired right away, but Francis sees a gender divide in who is able to complete these employment training courses.
“Starting out, it was about fifty-fifty men and women who came out for the construction safety course. Unfortunately, none of the women completed the training because they had to take care of their children, or take them to a doctor’s appointment, etcetera.”
“A lot of people don’t have anything they can put on their resume, so people won’t give them a chance.”
Balancing motherhood and work is something she’s familiar with. She has three girls between the ages of three and 16.
For years she worked for Michelin Tires in Waterville, until she got pregnant with her third child and decided, “I didn’t want to raise any more children while doing shift work.”
She moved back to the reserve where she spent her teens and moved in with her grandfather.
“It’s great,” she says, “If one of [the girls] says she wants to paint her room, he says, ‘what colour? I’ll get it.’”
Another initiative she’s looking forward to is the building a truck stop and café along the highway.
“That’s going to create a lots of jobs. It’s going to be great because a lot of people don’t have anything they can put on their resume, so people won’t give them a chance.”
She hopes the building of the truck stop means more people on the reserve will have a shot at that chance.
The Wait: Veterans paying out of pocket while PTSD Service Dogs studies ongoing
More than two years ago, Dr. James Gillet published a study contracted by Veterans Affairs that concluded, “It is evident given the extent of anecdotal evidence that [psychiatric service dogs] are effective in the management of PTSD.”
Despite his conclusion, the federal government is still not funding service dogs for veterans, saying more empirical evidence is required. They started a pilot project to study the effectiveness of psychological service dogs for veterans with PTSD and another project set to create national standards for service dogs.
It’s expected both projects will finish in spring of 2018, but In the meantime, veterans who want a dog have to find a way to come up with the money.
All that training doesn’t come cheap. Each dog costs around $3,500 to train, plus the yearly costs of vet bills, equipment and all the usual costs of owning a dog.
Many turn to their local legions. Back in June 2014 legions passed a resolution allowing local branches to use up to 25% of their Poppy Trust Accounts to help veterans get their PTSD service dogs.
That’s how Medric Cousineau met Thai, a golden lab and PTSD service dog from Canine Assistance Rehabilitation Education Services, in Kansas.
“The first night we were together she woke me up from my night terrors,” he says, “it was amazing.”
After Medric found his life back on track, he started Paws Fur Thought, a Nova Scotian non-profit that helps pair veterans with PTSD with service dogs.
Ten of the thirty dogs in the pilot project were placed by his organization.
He says he’s not thrilled with the wait, but he understands.
“I would love if somehow they could magically speed this up, but they can’t,” says Cousineau. “It’s frustrating. It’s aggravating, but because we’ve already placed 60 dogs, I know what they’ll find… The fact that they’re doing the standards and pilot project concurrently to me shows they believe in this. If they wanted to drag their feet, they could have.”
Sometimes the issue isn’t just money. It’s time.
“It takes anywhere between 14 and 18 months minimum to train these dogs… All the qualified schools in Canada, together, might be able to produce 100 dogs in a good year… We’re talking about breeding dogs now so we can place dogs 2 and a half years from now. Spring of 2018 sounds ridiculous to the people who are waiting, but that’s the reality we’re dealing with,” says Cousineau.
As for Veterans affairs not funding the dogs included in the pilot project, “They had to start somewhere. It would have been easier if they stepped up and funded the dogs. I think they were worried about price inflation,” says Cousineau.
Paws Fur Thought was lucky – earlier this month a Florida-based non-profit called Wounded Warriors gave them $175,000, which will allow them to pair 40 veterans with service dogs over the next few years. This allowed them to fund all their dogs included in the veterans affairs pilot project.