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National Strategy for Children and Youth

Full Title: An Act respecting a national strategy for children and youth in Canada

Summary#

This bill requires the federal government to create a national strategy for children and youth. It sets broad goals, defines how the strategy must be built and measured, and creates timelines for reports to Parliament and the public. It does not create new programs or funding on its own.

  • Requires a designated federal minister to develop and table a national strategy within 24 months of Royal Assent (Bill s.4(1), s.6(1)).
  • Sets goals including eliminating child poverty, ensuring a high and consistent standard of living, and complying with key UN agreements, including UNDRIP as it relates to children and youth (Bill s.4(2)(a)).
  • Mandates consultations with children and youth, provinces and municipalities, Indigenous governing bodies, and stakeholder groups (Bill s.4(3)–(4)).
  • Requires measurable outcomes and indicators, an assessment of unmet goals, a plan for immediate and preventive actions, and an estimate of resources needed (Bill s.4(2)(b)–(e)).
  • Calls for mechanisms to enable public monitoring, ongoing consultation, updates to the strategy, a process for children’s complaints, and parliamentary oversight, to be proposed in the strategy (Bill s.4(2)(f)).
  • Imposes regular progress reports every 6 months until the strategy is tabled, publication within 10 days of tabling, and a 5-year review cycle thereafter (Bill s.5; s.6(2); s.7).

What it means for you#

  • Households

    • No direct changes to benefits, services, or eligibility. The bill sets a planning and reporting process, not new programs (Bill s.4; s.6–7).
    • Children and youth may be invited to participate in consultations. The minister must ensure participants reflect Canada’s diversity (Bill s.4(3)(a), s.4(4)).
    • The strategy must propose ways for children and youth to submit complaints about how the strategy is carried out, but the bill itself does not create a complaint office (Bill s.4(2)(f)(iv)).
  • Indigenous peoples and organizations

    • The minister must consult Indigenous governing bodies and organizations serving First Nations, Inuit, and Métis children and youth (Bill s.4(3)(d)).
    • The strategy must align with UNDRIP as it relates to children and youth and consider Jordan’s Principle, the Inuit Child First Initiative, and relevant TRC and MMIWG recommendations (Bill s.4(2)(a)(iii)(D); s.4(5)(b)–(d)).
  • Workers and service providers

    • Organizations that serve or advocate for children and youth may be consulted during strategy development (Bill s.4(3)(e)).
    • No immediate changes to funding or program rules. Any changes would come later, if the government implements actions identified in the strategy (Bill s.4(2)(d)–(e)).
  • Provinces, territories, and municipalities

    • Representatives must be consulted, including those responsible for child and youth well-being (Bill s.4(3)(c)).
    • The bill does not impose new mandates on provincial or municipal programs. It focuses on a federal strategy and coordination (Bill s.4).
  • General public and Parliament

    • Progress reports must be tabled every 6 months until the strategy is tabled, and the final strategy must be posted online within 10 days after tabling (Bill s.5; s.6(2)).
    • Within five years of tabling, and every five years after, the minister must report on implementation and whether objectives are met (Bill s.7(1)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • The bill contains no appropriations, taxes, or fees. It requires the minister to develop, table, publish, and periodically review a strategy (Bill s.4–7).
  • Administrative costs for consultations and reporting are implied but not estimated in the bill text. Data unavailable.
  • No official fiscal note identified. Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Sets clear national goals, including the complete elimination of child poverty and a high, consistent standard of living for children and youth, providing a common direction for policy across sectors (Bill s.4(2)(a)(i)–(ii)).
  • Requires measurable outcomes and indicators and an evidence-based assessment, improving accountability for results (Bill s.4(2)(b)–(c)).
  • Mandates public monitoring tools, a process for children’s complaints, and parliamentary oversight, which can increase transparency (Bill s.4(2)(f)(i), (iv), (v)).
  • Enhances coordination by requiring consultations with children and youth, multiple federal ministers, provinces and municipalities, Indigenous governing bodies, and stakeholder groups (Bill s.4(3)).
  • Aligns federal efforts with Canada’s human rights obligations, including CRC and UNDRIP, and requires consideration of Jordan’s Principle and Inuit Child First Initiative (Bill s.4(2)(a)(iii); s.4(5)(b)–(d)).
  • Builds in regular progress updates and 5-year reviews, helping keep attention on outcomes over time (Bill s.5; s.7).

Opponents' View#

  • Sets very broad objectives (e.g., “complete elimination of child poverty”) without funding or implementation powers in the bill, raising concerns about deliverability and expectations (Bill s.4(2)(a)(i); s.4(2)(e)).
  • Risks duplication or jurisdictional conflicts, since many child services are provincial or municipal; consultations are required but roles and authorities are not clarified (Bill s.4(3)(c)).
  • Adds administrative workload for the federal department to consult widely and report every 6 months until the strategy is tabled, with ongoing 5-year reviews, without an estimate of costs (Bill s.5; s.7). Data unavailable.
  • Enforcement is indirect: the bill requires the strategy to propose oversight and complaint mechanisms but does not create or fund them, which may limit immediate impact (Bill s.4(2)(f)).
  • The 24-month timeline delays any concrete actions until after the strategy is tabled and then acted upon, so near-term outcomes for children and youth are uncertain (Bill s.6(1)).

Timeline

Nov 21, 2023 • Senate

First reading

Jun 4, 2024 • Senate

Second reading

Social Welfare
Social Issues
Indigenous Affairs