Vancouver Sun

N.S. to help clear land ownership confusion

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

HALIFAX • The Nova Scotia government says it is poised to help black residents who have struggled for decades to gain clear title to land that has been in their families since many arrived as Loyalists in the 1800s.

African Nova Scotian Affairs Minister Tony Ince issued a statement Monday saying an announceme­nt for “new supports” will be made Wednesday in Cherry Brook, a predominan­tly African Canadian community east of Halifax.

“We have made a commitment to deal with these systemic issues ... to ensure that we don’t repeat what has gone on in the past,” Ince said in an interview.

He declined to release any details about the government’s plan.

In the 1800s, the Nova Scotia government provided land to black and white Loyalists, but the Crown didn’t present land titles for black settlers, creating longstandi­ng confusion over ownership in 13 predominan­tly black communitie­s.

The province’s announceme­nt came the same day an expert panel presented a report on anti-black racism in Canada to the UN Human Rights Council, saying the specific challenges facing African Nova Scotians had to be dealt with.

The UN experts said they were particular­ly concerned with the province’s failure to properly implement the Land Titles Clarificat­ion Act of 1963, which was introduced to help people of African descent get title to land that had been given to their families long ago.

The act was supposed to provide a simple and inexpensiv­e method for clarifying land titles, but Nova Scotia residents told the panel that the process had become expensive, unjust and discrimina­tory, resulting in many rejected claims. Funding for the program had also dried up over the years.

“Residents must bear the burden for submitting all the documentat­ion, as well as the applicatio­n, lawyer and surveyor fees necessary to have the land title clarified,” the report said.

“(The) Department of Natural Resources ... acknowledg­ed that the process was unclear and stated they were attempting to pilot a project to assist residents in the community to obtain the title to their property ... The working group emphasized that the act must be implemente­d in collaborat­ion with, and for the benefit of, the affected population group.”

The CEO of the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission, Christine Hanson, said she was pleased to learn the government is taking a new approach.

“It’s a real bright spot in Nova Scotia to see that there’s political will to take action on a pretty significan­t recommenda­tion from the UN working group,” Hanson said in an interview.

Michelle Williams, a law professor at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said the UN report and the government’s decision to clarify the title process were welcome signs of progress for a file that had sat dormant for too long.

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