Click here to sign up for our free daily newsletter
The LLRIB calls the second generation cut off rule discriminatory against First Nations families. (Image Credit: File photo/larongeNOW Staff)
membership rules

LLRIB pressuring feds to adopt one-parent rule

May 15, 2026 | 4:32 PM

The Lac La Ronge Indian Band (LLRIB) wants the federal government to immediately adopt the one-parent rule when it comes to band membership registration. 

The current second-generation cut-off is an Indian Act rule stating if a person with Treaty status has a child with a non-status person for two consecutive generations, the third generation loses the right to register with a First Nation. 

Last year, Bill S-2 was introduced to the Senate and it was amended earlier this year to end the second generation cut-off in favour of one-parent rule. That would mean only one parent would need Treaty status to pass down their Treaty rights. At the moment, all federal parties approve of the change with the exception of Liberals.  

“Our people are our people. No law should tell us otherwise,” said Chief Tammy Cook Searson in a media release issued Friday.  

“The one-parent rule is a practical and immediate step Canada can take now while broader reform continues.” 

In a statement to larongeNOW, the Office of the Minister of Indigenous Services wrote while they remain committed to forwarding legislative reform options that address the second-generation cut-off in a manner that reflects the perspectives and priorities of First Nations, more consultation is needed to happen before any changes can be passed. 

“First Nations communities and organizations have already proposed diverse solutions related to the second-generation cut-off and Section 10 voting thresholds,” the statement reads. 

“That includes options beyond the single-parent rule amendment introduced by the Senate. Canada has an obligation to carefully and appropriately consider and consult on all proposed solutions, in accordance with First Nations’ right to self-determination.” 

Cook-Searson warns, however, that broader consultation on registration reform must not delay ending what the LLRIB calls ongoing discrimination against First Nations families. 

Currently, thousands of LLRIB members are affected by the second-generation cut-off, depending if they have children with a non-status person.  

“This rule has divided families and denied children their identity,” Cook Searson said.  

“It tells some of our children they belong, and others that they do not. That is deeply harmful, and it interferes with our inherent responsibility to determine who belongs to our nation.” 

Earlier this year, the LLRIB held engagement sessions with Elders, members and leadership across its communities. Members of the LLRIB strongly supported a one-parent rule.

Cook-Searson added the current registration system has masked the true size of First Nations populations, contributing to long-standing underfunding in housing, education, health care and other services.  

larongeNOW reached out to Desnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River MP Buckley Belanger on the matter. A representative sent a reponse identical to the statement released by the Office of the Minister of Indigenous Services, so there was no clarification on whether he is personally in favour of the one-parent rule or not.

derek.cornet@pattisonmedia.com