Sources say the agreement includes a payout of between $25,000 and $50,000 for each claimant.
The federal government has agreed to pay
hundreds of millions of dollars to survivors of the ‘60s Scoop for the
harm suffered by Indigenous children who were robbed of their cultural
identities by being placed with non-native families, The Canadian Press
has learned.
The national settlement with an estimated
20,000 victims, to be announced Friday by Crown-Indigenous Relations
Minister Carolyn Bennett, is aimed at resolving numerous related
lawsuits, most notable among them a successful class action in Ontario.
Confidential details of the agreement
include a payout of between $25,000 and $50,000 for each claimant, to a
maximum of $750 million, sources said.
In addition, sources familiar with the deal
said the government would set aside a further $50 million for a new
Indigenous Healing Foundation, a key demand of the representative
plaintiff in Ontario, Marcia Brown Martel.
Spokespeople for both Bennett and the
plaintiffs would only confirm an announcement was pending Friday, but
refused to elaborate.
“The (parties) have agreed to work towards a
comprehensive resolution and discussions are in progress,” Bennett’s
office said in a statement on Thursday. “As the negotiations are ongoing
and confidential, we cannot provide further information at this time.”
The sources said the government has also
agreed to pay the plaintiffs’ legal fees — estimated at about $75
million — separately, meaning the full amount of the settlement will go
to the victims and the healing centre, to be established in the coming
months, sources said.
The settlement would be worth at least $800
million and include Inuit victims, the sources said. The final amount is
less than the $1.3 billion Brown Martel had sought for victims of the
Ontario Scoop in which at-risk on-reserve Indigenous children were
placed in non-Aboriginal homes from 1965 to 1984 under terms of a
federal-provincial agreement.
In an unprecedented class action begun in
2009, Brown Martel, chief of the Beaverhouse First Nation, maintained
the government had been negligent in protecting her and about 16,000
other on-reserve children from the lasting harm they suffered from being
alienated from their heritage.
Brown Martel, a member of the Temagami First
Nation near Kirkland Lake, Ont., was taken by child welfare officials
and adopted by a non-native family. She later discovered the Canadian
government had declared her original identity dead.
Her lawsuit, among some 17 others in Canada,
is the only one to have been certified as a class action. Her suit
sparked more than eight years of litigation in which the government
fought tooth and nail against the claim.
However, in February, Ontario Superior Court
Justice Edward Belobaba sided with Brown Martel, finding the government
liable for the harm the ‘60s Scoop caused. Belobaba was firm in
rejecting the government’s arguments that the 1960s were different times
and that it had acted with good intentions in line with prevailing
standards.
While Bennett said at the time she would not
appeal the ruling and hoped for a negotiated settlement with all
affected Indigenous children, federal lawyers appeared to be trying to
get around Belobaba’s ruling. Among other things, they attempted to
argue individuals would have to prove damages on a case-by-case basis.
A court hearing to determine damages in the
Ontario action, scheduled for three days next week, has been scrapped in
light of the negotiated resolution, which took place under Federal
Court Judge Michel Shore.
One source said some aspects of the many
claims might still have to be settled but called Friday’s announcement a
“significant” step toward resolving the ‘60s Scoop issue — part of the
Liberal government’s promise under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to make
reconciliation with Canada’s Indigenous people a priority.
Jeffery Wilson, one of Brown Martel’s
lawyers, has previously said the class action was the first anywhere to
recognize the importance of a person’s cultural heritage and the
individual harm caused when it is lost.
The Canadian Press
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