Stop Indigenous child-welfare award so more can be paid, federal lawyers say
OTTAWA — While the federal Liberals insist they are appealing a Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruling on First Nations children because it limits the families that could receive compensation, multiple parties arguing on behalf of Indigenous children and families say the government simply doesn’t want to pay.
Legal arguments began in Federal Court Monday in Ottawa, where Justice Department lawyers asked Judge Paul Favel for a stay of the tribunal’s September decision ordering the federal government to compensate First Nations families wrongly split apart by the child-welfare system.
The ruling said the Ottawa “wilfully and recklessly” discriminated against Indigenous children living on-reserve by not properly funding child and family services. As a result, children were sent away from their homes, families and reserves because if they lived off-reserve, they would be covered by better-funded provincial systems. Others were removed from their families because authorities couldn’t provide supports to help keep them together.
Justice Department lawyer Robert Frater argued the tribunal’s judgement imposes a one-size-fits-all solution to an issue of systemic discrimination against Indigenous children and will not compensate all possible victims.