Ottawa Citizen

$321M FOR SCHOOL SURVIVORS.

FEDERAL FUNDING

- MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA • The federal government is committing $321 million in new funding for programs to help Indigenous communitie­s search burial sites at former residentia­l schools and to support survivors and their communitie­s.

Justice Minister David Lametti says he will appoint a special interlocut­or to work with Indigenous communitie­s and the government to propose changes to federal laws, policies and practices that are related to unmarked graves at residentia­l schools.

Speaking to a virtual news conference today, he says Canada currently does not have the necessary legal tools needed to deal with the complex issues presented by the findings of unmarked graves.

Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett says $83 million will be added to an existing $27-million program to fund searches of burial sites and commemorat­e the children who died at residentia­l schools.

She says the government will create a national advisory committee, made up of archeology, forensic, pathology, and mental health experts, to advise Indigenous communitie­s and the government about work to find and identify the children.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the government will spend $107 million on programs to provide essential mental health, culture and emotional services to support healing from intergener­ational trauma.

He says the government will provide $100 million over two years to help Indigenous communitie­s manage residentia­l school buildings, whether those plans include demolition, rehabilita­tion or the constructi­on of new facilities.

Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault says the government is setting aside $20 million to build a national monument in Ottawa that honours the survivors and all the children who were lost.

He says the new monument will be a commemorat­ive space where Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples can gather to “express their collective grief and find a way forward to heal together.”

Several Indigenous communitie­s have announced since spring that hundreds of unmarked graves have been located at the sites of former residentia­l schools.

In June, the Lower Kootenay Band in British Columbia said a search using ground-penetratin­g radar had found what are believed to be 182 human remains at a site close to a former residentia­l school in Cranbrook.

Cowessess First Nation earlier said that ground-penetratin­g radar detected 751 unmarked graves at the former Marieval Indian Residentia­l School east of Regina, a few weeks after the finding of what are believed to be the remains of 215 children in Kamloops, B.C.

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