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Qalipu First Nation tapping community voices to assess the need for housing support and services | CBC News

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A group of five people stand together in a hotel conference room.
From left, Christina Gervais, Deborah Joyce, Jason Park, Tegan Nelson and Taylor Sparklingeyes are part of the team collecting data for the Qalipu First Nation. (Submitted by Mitch Blanchard)

The Qalipu First Nation is trying to improve its housing strategy by getting more information from the people who need it most.

Members of the Qalipu Nation have been travelling across western Newfoundland with the Rural Development Network, a non-profit organization from Alberta that aims to support and amplify voices in Canada’s Indigenous communities.

Qalipu is one of six First Nations the network is partnering with to create what it’s calling the First Nation Housing Data Collection Tool, which health and wellness director Mitch Blanchard says will help them better understand where programs and resources should be developed.

“We want to make sure that we have the voices of our community members heard … and make sure that programs and services, you know, is targeting and meeting the community’s needs,” Blanchard said Tuesday. “This is their voices, their stories, which is a different approach from other researches that we’ve done in the past.”

Taylor Sparklingeyes, the data collection project manager, said initial responses have gone over quite well. More than 50 people have already shared their stories, she said, with affordability and a connection to cultural lands emerging as themes.

“It’s definitely very different perspectives from the different communities so far that we’ve engaged with. It’s very interesting to hear what different struggles they have in different locations across Newfoundland,” she said.

“There’s really nowhere for members to go connect and be one with nature, which you know, that in itself is a form of homelessness. That loss of connection to our culture and our traditional ways of living.”

Twelve people sit across two tables in conversation at a hotel conference room.
Members of the Qalipu First Nation have identified affordability and connection to cultural lands as key housing concerns, says Sparklingeyes. (Submitted by Mitch Blanchard)

Sparklingeyes said the goal of the data tool is for gather grassroots information that can be handed off to First Nations like the Qalipu to give them the power to make their own decisions on policy and programs.

“There are so many different forms of homelessness that First Nations people experience that are often overlooked by, you know, these Western constructs of how the Canadian government defines homelessness,” she said.

“Really understanding it from a culturally appropriate lens will amplify and provide accurate data around … how some of our people are living.”

The final session wrapped up in Stephenville on Tuesday, and data collection in other regions will continue in the fall.

CBC Newfoundland Morning6:26Amplifying rural Indigenous voices and hearing their concerns – we heard about a plan to better understand housing concerns with Qalipu First Nation members

On the West coast of Newfoundland, Qalipu first nation has a new partner visiting and working with them. The Rural Development Network is an Alberta-based organization that advocates for people in rural areas, and they’re here to better understand the housing needs of Qalipu First Nation band members. It’s called the First Nations Data Collection program. Project Manager Taylor Sparklingeyes was in Newfoundland this week,meeting with members of the Qalipu band. Here’s some of her conversation with CBC’s James Grudic

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