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Few ‘fast track’ dollars getting to residential school
claimants CBC News The figures are found in a government document tabled in the House of Commons last week. Conservative MP Jim Prentice had asked the Liberal government for a breakdown of money spent through the Alternative Dispute Resolution program. More than 13,000 former students at
Indian residential schools have filed claims against To speed up settlements, the Indian Residential Schools Resolution Department launched the ADR program in 2003. Instead of suing the government and going through the courts, former students can submit their claims to adjudicators.
INDEPTH: Aboriginal Canadians At the time ADR was introduced, Finance
Minister Ralph Goodale said 45 per cent of the money
would go to administration and the rest would be paid out in compensation. But the figures provided by Deputy Prime
Minister Anne McLellan suggest a much larger
percentage is not being paid to claimants. From the beginning of the program in Total expenses, including money for
research, operational costs, adjudicator costs, government lawyers, case
manager costs, travel expenses and compensation totalled
as much as $34.7 million. However, the government says some of the
research costs were non-ADR related, so the total expenses could theoretically
be as low as $13 million. The final result: money for claims
represents three to seven per cent of the money spent. "They carry on the pretense of being
fair and in reality, they're not fair to anyone," he said. However the man who runs the alternative
claims process disagrees. Ted Hughes says his adjudicators have
approved claims totalling $7 million, although he
can't say how much of that has actually been paid so far. Hughes said the fast-track program is succeeding and in the months to come many more claimants will be signing up. "The numbers are growing and I predict...it's on the verge of a take off," he said. |