Law firm’s suspension lifted, investigation begin
A British Columbia court has lifted a freeze on dozens of residential school survivor compensation cases handled by a Calgary law firm.
A British Columbia court has lifted a freeze on dozens of residential school survivor compensation cases handled by a Calgary law firm.
The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations is wading into the debate over comments made by the federal minister of Aboriginal Affairs.
A British Columbia court has suspended dozens of residential school survivor compensation cases handled by a Calgary law firm, APTN National News has learned.
APTN National News Young filmmakers were at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings in Halifax,…
APTN National News The Nisga’a are scattered across the world. Of over 600,000 members, only…
Residential school survivors expressed outrage Thursday over a statement made by Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Duncan who said the Indian residential school system was not an act of “genocide,” but a case “of education policy gone wrong.”
The Conservative government announced Thursday morning it was commissioning a stained glass tribute to the survivors of Indian residential schools.
Lawyers may see their fees reduced if they break the rules as they guide former students of Indian residential schools through the complex legal process designed to provide compensation for serious physical and sexual abuse suffered at the schools.
The residential school experience left thousands of Aboriginal people with emotional and physical scars.