Saturday, July 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. funds searches at former residential schools

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2021 02:26 PM
  • B.C. funds searches at former residential schools

The British Columbia government says it's providing $12 million to support First Nations with investigative work at former residential school sites.

It says the funding will also go towards programs to help community members experiencing trauma after the recent discoveries of what are believed to be the remains of 215 children at a former school in Kamloops, and 751 unmarked graves in Saskatchewan.

In a news release, the province says the funding will help First Nations identify, investigate, document, maintain, protect or commemorate residential school sites where children's remains may be located.

It says the province, the federal government and B.C.'s First Nations Health Authority are working with a number of nations that have requested assistance in determining the next steps for removing structures and searching other sites.

It says those nations include the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc, whose leadership announced the finding in Kamloops last month, and the Daylu Dena Council in Lower Post, where a former residential school is slated for demolition.

Indigenous Relations Minister Murray Rankin says in the statement that many sites across B.C. and Canada are the source of unanswered questions.

"Finding evidence of a burial site for children who attended the former Kamloops residential school was a stark reminder of the atrocities of the Canadian residential school system and how those continue to be felt to this day," he said in the news release on Monday.

Charlene Belleau, chair of the First Nations Health Council, says the money is an important first step in supporting the healing of Indigenous people in B.C.

Ottawa has pledged further support for the identification and investigation of burial grounds near former residential schools after allocating $27 million in 2019.

MORE National ARTICLES

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops
Heat warnings remain posted across B.C. and Alberta, large parts of Saskatchewan, Northwest Territories and a section of Yukon as the weather office forecasts temperatures reaching 40 C in some areas.

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record
The temperature in a village in British Columbia's southern Interior reached a scorching 46.1 C Sunday afternoon, marking a new all-time high recorded in Canada. The reading from Environment Canada in Lytton showed the mercury surpassed the previous record of 45 C set in Saskatchewan in 1937.

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record

Officer no longer working for defence minister

Officer no longer working for defence minister
A reserve military officer who was ordered suspended from the Vancouver police three years ago for an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate is no longer working for Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

Officer no longer working for defence minister

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse
The department says Canadian consular officials in Miami are in contact with local authorities to gather additional information and they are also in touch with the affected families.

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is resisting calls to fire Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett over a text message he acknowledges was "wrong" and "hurtful" and harmed his government's progress on reconciliation.

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett

Former Canadian Press bureau chief dies at 66

Former Canadian Press bureau chief dies at 66
Jill St. Louis, a former Vancouver bureau chief at The Canadian Press who thrived in a fast-breaking news environment and was a friend to anything with four legs, has died after a battle with metastatic lung cancer. She was 66.

Former Canadian Press bureau chief dies at 66