January - 2006
"Matter of weeks" for some till
first payment
By Paul Barnsley, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Ottawa
It will be close to one year before most of the compensation
money that will be paid to survivors of residential schools will
be distributed, but those over 65 years of age will receive payment
much earlier.
"There will be an early payment to the elderly, meaning
in this case 65 and over, in a matter of weeks," said Phil
Fontaine, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN),
in early December.
AFN communications director Don Kelly explained further that
the Roman Catholic Church has agreed to allow access to its archives
as part of the Nov. 23 reconciliation and compensation agreement
for residential school survivors. Between church, government
and AFN archives it is seen as a fairly easy task to identify
which former students are 65 years old or older as of May 30
of this [2005]. If you attended a school covered in the agreement,
you qualify for an $8,000 advance payment.
If you believe you qualify and are concerned that your current
address is not known to the government or to the AFN you are
invited to call Shannon Swan at the AFN offices in Ottawa. Her
numbers are 1-613-241-6789 ext. 332 or toll free at1-866-869-6789.
Kelly said the first cheques should be on their way sometime
in January.
As for younger survivors, it will take a bit longer.
"Now with the settlement agreement there are time deadlines
that can be enforced by the court.
The settlement agreement calls for all serious abuse claims to
be completed within nine months of being started and there must
be a minimum of 2,500 claims settled per year. This speeds up
the settlement process significantly," Fontaine said. "We're
assuming that the courts will approve the settlement agreement
for all the survivors. So the lump sum payments will start to
be paid out November 2006."
As with all bureaucratic processes, things take time.
"The reason it will take this amount of time is because
it will take a few months to draft a full settlement agreement
and the related documents. These have to be filed in all the
courts across the country," the national chief explained.
"And the target date for final Cabinet approval of the full
settlement agreement is March 31, 2006. And the date the agreement
will then be filed in all regions of the country is on May 1,
2006. The law requires that once the agreement is filed there
must be a six-month mandatory waiting period for people to decide
whether they are in or out, meaning simply whether they accept
the agreement. Payment will then be after the end of this process
and only after all the settlement conditions are met."
And Fontaine said discussions are now underway to address
another aspect of residential school compensation and reconciliation
that was not in the agreement for legal reasons.
"There's no court in the country that can direct a minister
of the Crown or a prime minister to apologize. We knew that.
And because this is a legal agreement, it'll be court supervised.
The apology is outside that," he told Windspeaker.
"So we are now negotiating the tone and substance of
the apology. There will be a full apology from Canada and it'll
be in a significant public ceremony. Our thought is the Parliament."
Asked if he meant that the goal is to have the prime minister
make the apology in the House of Commons, Fontaine said, "Yes."
Former Supreme Court Justice Frank Iacobucci was the government's
agent on this matter. He was expected to report to the Justice
minister in the spring. But Fontaine said he made one report
to Cabinet in October and things started heating up after that.
"The negotiations just gathered momentum and it became
clear that it was possible to come up with an agreement that
was satisfactory to all the diverse parties at the table and
was clearly a fair and just proposition for the survivors. So
we ended up working long into the night to do the deal and we
were able to bring this in before the call was made," he
said.
The issue of governments reducing pension or social assistance
payments when survivors receive this compensation is still not
completely dealt with, the national chief admitted, but the AFN
is working on it.
"We intervened in Manitoba when we found out that social
services people were forcing people on social assistance to pay
back some of their settlement money. The government here in Manitoba
was quick to act. They passed legislation saying there will be
no claw-backs of any of the settlement money," Phil Fontaine
said. "It's written into the agreement that the governments
will make best efforts to ensure that there is no claw-backs
for social benefits. And this is not taxable money. People will
not be required to include this in their income tax forms."
Agreements to eliminate claw-backs are being pursued one province
at a time.
"We've already started negotiations and discussions,"
Fontaine said. "The important thing here is that Canada
is committed to use its best efforts to obtain agreements with
provincial and territorial governments and-this is important-any
federal government department, to ensure that the receipt of
any payment under the agreement would not effect the amount,
nature or duration-I'm reading right from the agreement-of any
social benefits or social assistance benefits available or payable
to eligible lump sum recipients or eligible claimants under [dispute
resolution.]"
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