Cape Breton Post

Records documentin­g residentia­l school abuses to be destroyed as early as 2019

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Some of the records detailing painful abuses suffered by residentia­l school students will be destroyed as soon as two years from now following a Supreme Court ruling that settles the documentat­ion’s fate.

The 7-0 high court ruling released Friday brings clarity to an issue that pitted the privacy of victims against the importance of documentin­g a dark chapter in Canada’s relations with Indigenous Peoples.

For over a century, tens of thousands of Indigenous children were required to attend residentia­l schools, primarily run by religious institutio­ns and funded by the federal government. Students were not allowed to use their languages or cultural practices.

Former pupils provided accounts of physical, sexual and emotional abuse as part of an independen­t assessment process to determine compensati­on _ a program that flowed from a major 2006 settlement agreement aimed at ensuring a lasting resolution of the residentia­l schools legacy.

The Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that said the sensitive material collected for the independen­t assessment­s should be destroyed after 15 years, though individual­s could consent to archival preservati­on of their stories.

In its reasons for the decision, the Supreme Court said the negotiator­s of the settlement agreement intended the assessment process to be a confidenti­al and private one, and that claimants and alleged perpetrato­rs relied on these confidenti­ality assurances.

Under the process, claimants disclosed intimate personal informatio­n, including a firstperso­n narrative outlining his or her request for compensati­on. Applicatio­ns were then forwarded to the federal government and the church organizati­on that operated the residentia­l school.

If the claim was not settled at this stage, it proceeded to a hearing before an adjudicato­r, supervised by the chief adjudicato­r of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Secretaria­t. The settlement agreement operations branch of the federal Indigenous Affairs Department represente­d the government as a defendant to the claims.

Participan­ts were advised that the hearings would be held in private, and that each person who attended must sign a confidenti­ality agreement.

The secretaria­t and the operations branch both possess digital and physical copies of various records pertaining to more than 37,000 claims made under the assessment process.

Chief adjudicato­r Dan Shapiro welcomed the Supreme Court decision, saying many claimants had told him they would not have participat­ed in the assessment process without a promise of confidenti­ality “even from their families and even after their deaths.’’

Shapiro said during a telephone call with media Friday that the 15-year clock for destructio­n of records begins with the conclusion of each claim, and includes an alternativ­e dispute resolution program that preceded the assessment process.

The first dispute-resolution cases were likely finalized in 2004, meaning the records involved could be destroyed as early as 2019, Shapiro said.

The next step is to gain Ontario Superior Court approval of a notice program to inform all claimants they have the option of archiving their assessment records, or whatever account they are comfortabl­e preserving, he said.

“There is urgency to getting this program before the court and we are committed to doing that. We want to do it right.’’

The Assembly of First Nations had told the Supreme Court that overturnin­g the decision to allow destructio­n of the records would amount to another breach of trust for the same vulnerable people who were abused at residentia­l schools as young children.

The federal government unsuccessf­ully argued the documentar­y record must be fully preserved to ensure what happened is never forgotten.

It said federal laws governing access to informatio­n, privacy and archives provide the proper balance for safeguardi­ng the records of historical value while protecting individual privacy and confidenti­ality.

The 2006 settlement agreement led to creation of a Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission that documented the history of the residentia­l schools. The Winnipeg-based National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion is now archiving and storing records of the commission.

Crown-Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett said she was disappoint­ed in the high court ruling because the assessment records could have helped the centre do a deeper analysis of “systemic problems’’ related to the residentia­l schools.

Shapiro noted more than 7,000 former students had already provided voluntary statements to the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission.

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