The list is maintained by
Indigenous Services Canada. Sole authority for determining who will be registered is held by the Indian Registrar.
Revocation of status The discriminatory reasons for revoking status were: • marrying a man who was not registered under the
Indian Act • enfranchisement (until 1960, an Indian
could vote in federal elections only by renouncing their status as a person who was registered under the Indian Act, i.e. their "Indian status") • having a mother and paternal grandmother who were not registered under the
Indian Act (these people lost status at 21) • being born out of wedlock of a mother who was registered under the
Indian Act and a father who was not.
Documentary proof of Indian status Since 1956 the Canadian federal government has issued an identity document to individuals who are registered under the
Indian Act. Traditionally these documents have been used by First Nations people in Canada to cross the border between Canada and the United States under the
Jay Treaty. The document is called a certificate of Indian status or secure certificate of Indian status. It is often called a "status card".
Non-status Indians == Indian status card ==