Federal official says decisions made in ‘caretaker’ period before Wilson-Raybould was justice minister
Residential school survivors say they’re saddened to hear Canada’s first Indigenous justice minister, Jody Wilson-Raybould, wasn’t consulted by government officials on the decision to abandon an appeal in a key legal case affecting them.
In the days after Wilson-Raybould was sworn in back in November 2015, the government dropped its court appeal of the Roman Catholic Church’s compensation buyout agreement. That ended the government’s legal attempts to make the church pay the millions in compensation remaining on its $79 million worth of promises to survivors.
“That’s why [Wilson-Raybould] was there. That’s why that position is there.… Definitely, she should have had a choice to be in on that decision,” said Rick Daniels, a member of Mistawasis Nêhiyawak and a survivor of St. Michael’s Indian Residential School in Duck Lake, Sask.
An official with Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada provided some details Friday, saying key decisions on…
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Father Jose Arroyo