The Peterborough Examiner

’60s Scoop survivors hope foundation aids healing

Children were taken from families and placed in non-Indigenous homes

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Survivors of the notorious ’60s Scoop are set to mark a key milestone on Thursday with the ceremonial launch of a $50-million foundation aimed at healing the damage wrought by the practice of taking Indigenous children from their families and placing them in non-Indigenous homes.

Establishm­ent of the foundation was part of a hard-fought class-action settlement and a key demand of a lead plaintiff in the case.

Thursday’s virtual event will see the ceremonial investitur­e of a 10-member board for the Sixties Scoop Healing Foundation that will comprise of Indigenous directors.

They include the government’s lone appointee, Harry LaForme, a retired justice on the Ontario Court of Appeal and member of the Eagle Clan of the Mississaug­as of New Credit First Nation.

“It’s going to be a wonderful time of celebratio­n,” Marcia (Sally) Brown Martel, the lead plaintiff in Ontario, said on Wednesday. “Not only for myself, but a celebratio­n for people all across Canada to be able to say, ‘Look what we can do!’ ”

Other board members will be announced at the virtual ceremony. Among those expected to attend is music icon, Buffy Sainte-Marie. It will be up to the new board to determine where the foundation will be housed.

The ’60s Scoop arose out of g overnment polic y under which Indigenous children were taken from their families and placed in non-Indigenous homes.

In what became a years-long legal struggle, survivors successful­ly sued the government for their loss of heritage, culture and family ties. Ultimately, in 2017, the government agreed to pay $800 million — $50 million of which was earmarked for the foundation.

Jeffery Wilson, the lead lawyer who advanced the claim, said he hoped the foundation will lead to better understand­ing of the damage inflicted on the children and families.

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