Lethbridge Herald

St. Anne’s survivors lose fight

APPEAL COURT RULES AGAINST RESIDENTIA­L SCHOOL VICTIMS

- Colin Perkel THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

Survivors of the notorious St. Anne’s residentia­l school have no right to documents they argued were crucial to compensati­ng them for the horrific abuses they suffered, Ontario’s top court has ruled.

In rejecting a trio of interrelat­ed appeals, the Court of Appeal found no reason to interfere with a lower court decision that sided with the Canadian government’s view the documents should be kept secret.

The materials in question were generated during 62 lawsuits filed between 2000 and 2003 by 154 Indigenous children over the physical and sexual abuse they suffered at St. Anne’s in Fort Albany, Ont.

The appellants argued the documents should have been available to bolster compensati­on claims under a process set up as part of the settlement of a class action over the Indian residentia­l school system.

Two of the appellants — a man known as H-15019 and a woman known as K-10106 — were both initially denied compensati­on but both succeeded after a legal fight and reviews.

H-15019, who was ultimately awarded $183,556, argued the difficulti­es he had in advancing his claim arose because of the government’s failure to disclose all relevant documents it had, and that other claimants might have run into the same issue.

However, in its decision this week, the Appeal Court agreed the claimant had no direct tie to the civil litigation materials and the government, therefore, was not obliged to turn them over.

“The discovery evidence at issue was obtained in 62 distinct civil actions,” the Appeal Court said. “H-15019 was not a plaintiff in any of (them).”

In various lower court rulings over the past several years, Superior Court of Justice Paul Perell found the Canadian government had not acted in bad faith.

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