Ottawa Citizen

Residentia­l school survivors hail $50M deal

Settlement ends lawsuit though ‘demons’ remain

- SUE BAILEY

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. • Former residentia­l school student Toby Obed stood in front of provincial Supreme Court in St. John’s, N.L., and cried.

He wept for himself as a traumatize­d child who, he testified in the same courthouse last fall, was strapped by staff for speaking his Inuit language, and who was sexually attacked at the age of seven by an older student.

Obed struggled to speak Tuesday just after lawyers for about 800 class-action members outlined for Judge Robert Stack a $50-million proposed settlement reached with the federal government.

“It’s over,” he sobbed. “After 10 years, I can let this rest.

“I’m still going to have to live with it, live with the demons,” he told reporters. “But I can put that behind me as best I can.”

Obed also cried for about 120 class members who died waiting for a resolution. He said it was shameful that the federal government under then-prime minister Stephen Harper excluded Newfoundla­nd and Labrador from a national apology in 2008 and related settlement package that has paid out more than $4 billion.

Obed and 28 other former students were the only ones in the country forced to testify in open court about the alleged abuse they suffered.

Obed stressed that he and many other former students will continue to wait for an official apology.

Plaintiffs’ lawyer Steven Cooper said compensati­on, recognitio­n and healing are long overdue.

“It should not have come to this,” he said outside court. “It’s a happy day today, but these survivors should not have been put through anything like this. It’s ridiculous.”

Class members must now be notified of the proposed settlement. Any objections will be heard in court starting Sept. 27 before Stack rules on whether to approve the deal.

Cooper said aboriginal students who attended the schools after the province joined Confederat­ion in 1949 would be eligible for compensati­on so long as they were alive as of Nov. 23, 2006. That’s one year before litigation began. The estates of those who have died since the 2006 cutoff could apply, he said.

Students who lived in school residences for less than five years are eligible for $15,000 in general compensati­on while those who lived there five years or more are eligible for $20,000.

Compensati­on for sexual or significan­t physical abuse could be up to $200,000 and will be based on sworn testimony.

Cooper said the federal government would also pay an undetermin­ed extra amount for healing and commemorat­ion. An advisory committee including indigenous groups is to meet in June to plan.

The previous Conservati­ve government argued Ottawa was not responsibl­e for running schools in North West River, Cartwright, Nain and Makkovik — all in Labrador — or in St. Anthony in northern Newfoundla­nd.

The Internatio­nal Grenfell Associatio­n ran three of the schools, while the Germanbase­d Moravian Missionari­es ran the other two.

Defence documents denied the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador schools were “akin” to now-defunct institutio­ns under the federal Indian Act that were the subject of the federal Indian Residentia­l Schools Settlement Agreement.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs countered that, after the province joined Confederat­ion in 1949, Ottawa had the same legal duty to aboriginal students in the province as elsewhere in Canada.

I’M STILL GOING TO HAVE TO LIVE WITH IT, LIVE WITH THE DEMONS. BUT I CAN PUT THAT BEHIND ME AS BEST I CAN. — TOBY OBED, RESIDENTIA­L SCHOOL SURVIVOR

 ?? PAUL DALY / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toby Obed, a residentia­l school survivor from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, reacts Tuesday after a $50-million settlement was outlined by lawyers. About 800 class-action plaintiffs are seeking an apology and damages after being excluded from a federal...
PAUL DALY / THE CANADIAN PRESS Toby Obed, a residentia­l school survivor from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, reacts Tuesday after a $50-million settlement was outlined by lawyers. About 800 class-action plaintiffs are seeking an apology and damages after being excluded from a federal...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada