60s Scoop demonstrations unfold across the country
They wore purple arm bands in Ottawa, a healing colour in some Indigenous cultures.
They wore purple arm bands in Ottawa, a healing colour in some Indigenous cultures.
Dozens of Scoop survivors gathered at an Indigenous school in Edmonton for a sixth and final meeting with provincial officials.
WINNIPEG – Some Manitoba survivors of the ’60s Scoop are encouraging others to opt out…
InFocus It’s a proposed $800-million dollar settlement for Indigenous children who were ripped from their…
Survivors say the federal government’s proposed $800-million settlement does not go far enough.
The 60s Scoop was a practice that saw Indigenous, Metis and Inuit children taken from their families and placed in non-Indigenous care.
APTN Investigates Sixties Scoop survivors will have a lot more to think about now that…
There are between 20,000 to 200,000 potential ’60s Scoop survivors that may be eligible.
Ottawa is currently negotiating a 60s Scoop compensation claim with a lawyer it says overbilled the government during the residential school process.
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