Residential school day scholars launch class-action lawsuit - Action News
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British Columbia

Residential school day scholars launch class-action lawsuit

The leader of the Assembly of First Nations hopes a class-action lawsuit launched in B.C. on behalf of a group of former residential school students will expand across Canada.

Day students excluded from 2006 residential school settlement

From the late 19th century onwards, aboriginal children in Canada were forced to attend government residential schools where they suffered emotional, physical and sometimes sexual abuse at the hands of church teachers

The leader of the Assembly of First Nations hopes a class-action lawsuit launched in British Columbia on behalf of a group of former residential school students will expand across Canada.

TheTk'emlps te Secwpemc Indian Band in the B.C. Interior and the Sechelt Indian Band on the province's central coast have launched a case on behalf of day scholars who attended residential schools during the day, but went home at night.

The lawsuit follows a2006 federal decision to compensate residential school survivors, which only applies to those forced to live at the government schools designed to wipe out aboriginal cultureand not to day scholars.

Under the 2006 settlement, residential school survivors are eligible toautomatically receive a Common Experience Payment amounting to $10,000 for the first year spent boarding and $3000 for every subsequent year.

However, the assembly's national chief Shawn Atleo said this week former day scholars from across the country were also scarred bythe residential school system and want to be acknowledged and compensated.

Stolen children

Residential schools were opened in Canada in the 19th century as part of the government's "aggressive assimilation" policy, which aimed to get aboriginal children to adopt Christianity and Canadian customs and diminish native traditions.

In all, about 150,000 aboriginal, Inuit and Mtis children were removed from their communities and forced to attend the church-run, government-funded industrial schools.It is not known how many day scholars also attended the schools.

Throughout the years,children studied and livedin substandard conditions and endured physical and emotional abuse. The aims of assimilation meant devastation for those who were subjected to years of mistreatment.

Over the past two decades, there have also been more than 12,000 lawsuits launched against the federal government and churches alleging sexual, physical and other kinds of abuse.