Calgary Herald

Murray Sinclair to chair talks

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA • The former chairman of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada will aid talks between the federal government and child-welfare advocates in hopes of securing an agreement to compensate First Nations children.

The Liberal government says Murray Sinclair will chair discussion­s between the sides including lawyers representi­ng plaintiffs in a related class-action lawsuit as they try to settle the matter outside of court by the end of December.

Sinclair, a former senator, led the commission that spent from 2008 to 2015 investigat­ing the experience­s of thousands of Indigenous people sent to residentia­l schools as children. He is a highly respected voice on matters of reconcilia­tion between Indigenous and non-indigenous people.

“I'm very optimistic that we'll be able to have an agreed-upon solution in the time frame that we've set,” Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu told The Canadian Press in an interview Wednesday. She said it's been made clear to the government negotiator­s that they are to be “solution-focused” in their deliberati­ons.

Sinclair's role in the talks comes after the Liberal government appealed a Federal Court ruling last month upholding orders for it to pay $40,000 each to thousands of individual First Nations children removed from their homes, as well as to some of their relatives.

The compensati­on stemmed from an earlier finding by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal that Ottawa discrimina­ted against First Nations kids by knowingly underfundi­ng child and family services on reserves. Advocates say this lack of funding led to families being needlessly separated, which caused suffering. The issue has gone on for years, with the original complaint of discrimina­tion brought forward in 2007.

The tribunal also ruled the federal government needed to expand its criteria of Jordan's Principle, a measure stipulatin­g that jurisdicti­onal disputes should not get in the way of providing services to First Nations children. The parties in the case include the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society.

In 2019, the Liberal government challenged the tribunal's orders in Federal Court. After losing its case in a decision delivered in late September, Indigenous leaders, opposition politician­s and child-welfare advocates from across Canada implored Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government to cease its court battle and pay out the compensati­on owed to First Nations kids.

Despite pressure to do otherwise, Trudeau's government filed a notice of appeal with the Federal Appeal Court on the last day to do so. That's also when some of his ministers revealed that the parties had agreed to pause litigation until December to provide time to hopefully agree on a financial settlement outside of court.

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