The Telegram (St. John's)

Proposal to settle residentia­l school lawsuits

- ANNA MEHLER PAPERNY AND MOIRA WARBURTON

TORONTO — Canada has reached a proposed settlement with a group of Indigenous survivors of the now-defunct residentia­l schools for the abuse they suffered, a federal minister said on Wednesday, ending a 14-year fight for justice.

The settlement comes as the government is scrambling to deal with a national outcry after the remains of 215 Indigenous children were discovered at a former residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C. The government has been under pressure to stop legally opposing Indigenous people’s requests for compensati­on and acknowledg­ement in court following the discovery.

Under the latest agreement, the government will provide $10,000 to each survivor involved in the class action lawsuit and create a $50-million Indigenous-led nonprofit to support wellbeing and cultural learning.

The settlement does not include an explicit admission of wrongdoing by the government. Crown-indigenous

Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett said the plaintiffs had hoped for an official apology and “while this is not part of a settlement agreement, we will be listening to their concerns, as we work together on this request.”

The estimated 12,000 to 20,000 survivors in the lawsuit attended residentia­l schools during the day and went home at night. Because of this, they were not included in a previous settlement for residentia­l school survivors.

Between 1831 and 1996, Canada’s residentia­l school system forcibly separated about 150,000 indigenous children from their parents, bringing them to institutio­ns with the stated purpose of assimilati­on. They were malnourish­ed, beaten and sexually abused in what the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission called cultural genocide in its landmark 2015 report.

The proposal is open for comments from plaintiffs until August 2021, and will be presented along with the comments to the court in September for approval.

Bennett told reporters at a Wednesday news conference that the government will continue to work with survivors and their families and others to resolve remaining childhood claims.

“Together we will move forward on the path to reconcilia­tion,” she said.

CANADA IS A “REPEAT OFFENDER”

Several plaintiffs spoke at the conference, describing the pain the residentia­l schools and the years-long lawsuit brought them.

“This has been a really long process, 14 years, returning to court, regurgitat­ing trauma,” Charlotte Gilbert, a representa­tive for the plaintiffs in the class action lawsuit, said.

A separate class action, still ongoing, deals with residentia­l schools’ cultural damage and involves 105 indigenous bands.

“No amount of compensati­on can change the legacy of residentia­l schools,” Diena Jules, a survivor of the schools, said. “Nothing can restore us to being whole.”

The government remains embroiled in several ongoing lawsuits involving Indigenous people in Canada. A Canadian Human Rights Tribunal case involving discrimina­tion through the systemic underfundi­ng of child and family services against Indigenous children — resulting in a disproport­ionate number of Indigenous children in foster care — has a hearing next week.

The Canadian government has admitted its child and family services funding system “was broken and needed immediate and substantia­l reform.” But in its most recent filings it argued the tribunal was the wrong venue for this dispute and that individual compensati­on was not appropriat­e in this instance.

“It’s a really dangerous argument,” said Cindy Blackstock, a member of the Gitxsan nation and executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, which brought the legal action.

Canada is “a repeat offender” when it comes to abrogating the rights of Indigenous children, she said. “It needs a heavy hand for deterrence.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Children’s shoes, toys, candy, tobacco and flowers are left on a memorial at the Portage La Prairie Indian Residentia­l School, which closed in 1975, in Portage La Prairie, Man. on Tuesday.
REUTERS Children’s shoes, toys, candy, tobacco and flowers are left on a memorial at the Portage La Prairie Indian Residentia­l School, which closed in 1975, in Portage La Prairie, Man. on Tuesday.

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