Newfoundland and Labrador judge approves class action residential school settlement

Newfoundland and Labrador judge approved a $50-million class-action settlement for former residential school students.

The Canadian Press
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court judge has approved a $50-million class-action settlement for former residential school students in the province.

The plaintiffs’ lawyer, Steven Cooper, says the settlement was approved by Justice Robert Stack today, ending a nearly 10-year legal battle.

Cooper says the roughly 800 to 1,000 class-action members are pleased with the outcome, but they still want an apology from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Former prime minister Stephen Harper excluded the province’s former residential schools from a national apology and related compensation package in 2008.

But Cooper says he has no doubt Trudeau will make an apology and he commended the Liberal government, saying the legal process became much swifter after the change in government last year.

About 120 class members died waiting for a resolution.

 

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3 thoughts on “Newfoundland and Labrador judge approves class action residential school settlement

  1. Leroy_Mouchelette says:

    If you talked to ALL former students instead of just the class members you would know that this is an issue The people who actually caused the harms have gotten away with it by this class action. Shoddy, one-sided coverage.

  2. Shouldn’t it be the provincial government, IGA, and Moravian church be the ones apologizing?

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