Delegated Aboriginal Agency Kw’umut Lelum opens service hub in Duncan

Expansion aims to increase jurisdiction over Indigenous children and youth in care in the mid-Island region.

Kw’umut Lelum opened its doors to a new service hub in Duncan.

In early August, Kw’umut Lelum opened its doors to a new service hub in Duncan.

Kw’umut Lelum is a Delegated Aboriginal Agency (DAA) that offers services to nine member nations, including Halalt, Ts’uubaa-asatx (Lake Cowichan), Lyackson, Málexeł, Penelakut, Qualicum, Snaw-naw-as, Snuneymuxw, and Stz’uminus. 

The new service hub will increase accessibility to services to member nations in and around the Duncan area, and includes access to a team of social workers, family support and wellness staff.

“Cultural connectivity is at the heart of what we do as an organization and we are excited to be able to expand our work into urban Aboriginal communities on the island,” says Jennifer Holstein, the communications and information officer at Kw’umut Lelum. 

Duncan was identified as an area with overlapping agencies, including the Ministry of Child and Family Development (MCFD), Kw’umut Lelum and Lalum’utul’ Smun’eem, another DAA on Vancouver Island that services the Cowichan Tribes. 

“Traditionally, our membership did not fall under these colonial boundaries,” says Bill Yoachim, executive director of Kw’umut Lelum. When asked why it is important to Kw’umut Lelum to have urban service hubs, Yoachim says, “We are in a colonial system, and originally Kw’umut Lelum was designed to serve our members on reserve, however, two-thirds of our membership live off-reserve.”

For 23 years, Kw’umut Lelum has been based on the Snuneymuxw First Nation and has been offering a broad range of culturally relevant programs and services. This includes Child Safety & Collaborative Family Planning and Cultural Permanency Planning.  

As a DAA, its mandate was originally to provide services to community members living on-reserve. But since 2018, Kw’umut Lelum has been expanding its jurisdiction to provide services for Indigenous children and youth in care who are members of the nine member nations, but are currently receiving services from MCFD. 

In 2019, Kw’umut Lelum opened its first urban service hub in Nanaimo to meet the increase in demand for culturally relevant services. 

Now, files held by MCFD for children and families of the nine member nations residing in Duncan will begin to be transferred, Yoachim explained in a phone interview.

The opening of the hub in Duncan comes at a time when Indigenous nations in the province are actively seeking further authority over the care and well-being of their children. 

In a press release issued by Kw’umut Lelem, Yoachim says, “This expansion is about more than just providing needed services to Aboriginal families. This is about returning the rights to Indigenous communities to be able to care for their own children.”

Author


Anna McKenzie, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

We live in a media ecosystem that thrives on misinformation. Big Tech and AI companies are consuming the work of real human beings and Canadian news has been banned on Facebook and Instagram.

Eden Fineday

And yet, I have hope for journalism because of the work we’re doing at IndigiNews.

At IndigiNews, we embody tâpwêwin — the Cree value of integrity and responsibility in truth-telling. We are committed to our independent, Indigenous-led newsroom rooted in community, accountability, and relationality. We believe storytelling is a sacred fire that connects our pasts, presents, and futures through the storytellers in our Storytelling Lodge. IndigiNews creates space for Indigenous journalists, storytellers, Knowledge Keepers, and communities to gather, learn, and share stories that matter.

As a registered charity, we are building a fire that allows our work not just to ignite but to thrive. Rather than relying on advertising or corporate acquisition, IndigiNews is sustained by people like you who believe Indigenous stories are important for the future of our communities.

Your support is making a real difference.

Our community of supporters, our Firekeepers, make it possible to grow our newsroom, publish award-winning journalism, train emerging Indigenous journalists through initiatives like the ReFocus Photojournalism Fellowship, and publish trustworthy stories that serve our communities across the country. Every story we publish helps fill in gaps left by mainstream media and ensures Indigenous perspectives are represented with care, accuracy and respect.

But there is still more work to do.

As the media landscape becomes more and more uncertain, community support is as necessary and essential as it’s ever been. Every new Firekeeper helps protect the independence of our newsroom and strengthens journalism that is accountable to our many and varied communities over corporations.

That’s why we’re inviting you to become a Firekeeper.

Firekeepers tend to and protect the sacred fire. Your monthly contributions directly support IndigiNews’s Storytelling Lodge, helps sustain our independent, Indigenous-led newsroom, and ensures future generations of Indigenous storytellers have the resources they need to do the work.

As a registered Canadian charity, all eligible donations receive a charitable tax receipt.

If you believe Indigenous stories matter, if you value independent journalism, and if you want to help build a strong future for Indigenous media, we invite you to join our circle of Firekeepers today.

Together, we can keep the fire burning.

— Eden Fineday, Publisher, IndigiNews

Support us now

Latest Stories