Times Colonist

Manitoba to pay $530M in settlement for cuts to child welfare allowance

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The Manitoba government has agreed to pay $530 million to settle three class-action lawsuits over child welfare benefit payments in an agreement that plaintiffs say should send a message to other provinces.

The proposed settlement, which still requires court approval, would compensate an estimated 30,000 children, some of whom have since become adults, for money the province clawed back from federal payments between 2005 and 2019.

Similar lawsuits have been filed in Saskatchew­an and Alberta.

“[For] the province to assume, with no agreement and no authority and no provision in place, that they could somehow just take this money from the kids was in our opinion theft and wrong,” Elsie Flette, one of the lead plaintiffs in the case, said Monday.

Flette was chief executive officer of a regional child welfare authority when, in 2005, the former NDP government in Manitoba started clawing back a federal benefit called the Children’s Special Allowance. The money goes to agencies that care for children and mirrors the monthly Canada Child Benefit cheques given to parents raising children across the country.

The province had argued it was right to keep the federal money since it was paying for children in provincial care. At the same time, the number of children in care rose sharply. About 90 per cent of children in the system are Indigenous.

The plaintiffs said the money was supposed to pay for recreation programs, cultural activities, hockey and a host of other items not covered by basic child welfare funding.

The former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government ended the clawback in 2019 but also tried to prevent any legal action via a bill in the legislatur­e. In 2022, a Court of Queen’s Bench justice ruled the province was wrong to have withheld the money and struck down the ban on legal action.

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