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)).