Crown-Indigenous relations minister 'absolutely open' to review of survivor compensation deal
CBC
Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller says he's "absolutely open" to an independent review of the residential school compensation deal reached between the federal government and Catholic Church.
"I would say we're absolutely open to the idea; we have to get to the bottom of what we've done," Miller said in a phone interview Monday. "The job I've been given is to get to the bottom of these things.… This is not the end of the story."
Advocates say while that's encouraging news, Miller could show good faith by immediately releasing key government documents related to the deal he admits are already in his possession.
"We expect the federal government to release everything. This is a necessary step for many survivors in their own healing journey," Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief Bobby Cameron said.
In recent months, a CBC News investigation has revealed new details of the Catholic Church's three key promises to compensate survivors under the landmark Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA).
Back in 2005, it had promised $29 million in cash, but this commitment was not met after millions of dollars were spent on lawyers, administration and other unapproved expenses.
The Church had also promised to give "best efforts" to fundraise $25 million, but that effort came up $21 million short during a period when Catholic officials devoted more than $300 million to church and cathedral building projects.
Finally, the Church promised to provide $25 million worth of "in-kind services" to survivors. CBC News obtained the list of those services, and survivors say most of the money provided was for inappropriate colonial religious services, such as Bible study courses or sending priests and nuns to preach in Indigenous communities.
Other denominations, such as United, Anglican and Presbyterian denominations, paid without incident. But 10 years later, the Catholic Church had not.
Government officials took the church to court and told them to pay. A Saskatchewan judge sided with the Catholic Church, approving a buyout of less than $2 million.
The government appealed, but then dropped or abandoned it and the case was closed. Survivors and advocates have been trying for years to find out exactly who dropped the case and why.
CBC News recently reached out to more than a dozen current or former ministers and senior bureaucrats; several admit they likely have relevant documents but they refused to share them.
That includes both current Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller and Bernard Valcourt, who served as the Conservative minister of Aboriginal affairs and northern development from February 2013 until his defeat in the October 2015 federal election.
Miller said it was Valcourt who made the decision to abandon the appeal just before the new Liberal government took power. He said he has a document proving it, but declined to share it.