#End2ndGen

Bill S-2, An act to amend the Indian Act, is the latest attempt by the Government of Canada  to remove blatant sex and race discrimination from the Indian Act. This Bill was designed principally to respond to discrimination against First Nations women and children caused by automatically stripping them of Indian status when a husband or father lost his status due to enfranchisement. The B.C. Superior Court recently ruled that this discrimination violates Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms.  

The Bill was first introduced in the Senate, where Senators recognized what advocates have been saying for decades: it’s time to stop tinkering with the Indian Act and making small changes only after long and costly legal battles. The Senate Committee on Indigenous Peoples, when studying the Bill, recognized that the central piece of discrimination that is still in the Indian Act is the second-generation cut-off. And now is the time to remove it.

The second generation cut off penalizes both women and men who ‘out-parent’, that is, parent a child with a non-status person. When a person with full status (6(1)) has a child with a non-status person, their child receives only partial status or 6(2). If a 6(2) person parents with a non-status person, that child is not entitled to status. That is the second-generation cut-off.

Toolkits

View the House of Common’s petition!

Read Sen. PJ Prosper's June 3 submission to the House INAN committee

View the support so far! Don’t see your organization or community? Send a copy of your BCR or a letter from leadership in support of the Senate’s amendments to endsecondgen@gmail.com

Frequently Asked Questions

Additional Reading

Quotes from members of the Indian Act
Sex-Discrimination Working Group

National registry of children excluded after the second generation

The National Registry of Children Excluded After the Second Generation is an initiative created by a group of parents and volunteers from Wendake.