Thunder Bay

New accord gives Métis more funding, control over skills training

The Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour signed the accord Friday morning with Metis National Council president Clément Chartier.

The accord comes with a commitment of $325 million over five years and $67 million per year after that

Patty Hajdu, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour signed the Métis Nation Skills and Employment Training Accord Friday morning. (Jason Viau/CBC)

Métis people in Canada will have more control over skills training and more money to pay for it under a new accord signed with the Federal government Friday.

The Métis Nation Skills and Employment Training Accord commits $325 million over five years to training, and an additional $67 million per year after that.

The funding constitutes an increase of nearly 30 per cent over the previous funding allotment for Métis skills development under the former Aboriginal Skills and Employment Training Strategy, according to the Ministry of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour.

It will also work more like a provincial transfer rather than a funding program that the Métis would have to keep reapplying for, Minister Patty Hajdu told CBC News.

"That gives communities that runway to be able to do longer term planning, to work with folks that sometimes have a harder time getting skills training or education, that might be further away from a career or work and to be very specific in terms of how they want to deliver those programs," Hajdu said.  

The funding is part of a larger block of $2 billion over five years for a newly transformed Indigenous Skills and Employment Training Program. 

Hajdu signed the accord Friday morning with Métis National Council president Clément Chartier.

It is the first sub-accord to be signed with the Métis Nation since the signing of the Canada-Métis National Accord in April 2017.