Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former Residents Of 12 Ontario Institutions For Disabled Win $36-million Lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2016 11:52 AM
  • Former Residents Of 12 Ontario Institutions For Disabled Win $36-million Lawsuit
TORONTO — Former residents of 12 Ontario institutions for people with developmental disabilities have won a $36-million settlement in a class-action lawsuit against the provincial government.
 
The Superior Court of Justice has approved a tentative settlement reached last fall to compensate people who suffered harm while living at the residential facilities between the 1960s and when the last one closed in 1999.
 
The former residents have up to four months to ask for a copy of their personal resident files from the Ministry of Community and Social Services, and will be advised by the claims administrator on how to apply for compensation.
 
Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur says she's glad the province was able to reach a "fair" settlement because the residents "were harmed in a place that was intended to provide them with care."
 
The provincial government started closing the residential institutions in 1977 and moving adults with developmental disabilities into homes in their communities, with appropriate supports and services.
 
Social Services Minister Helena Jacek says the province wants people with developmental disabilities to live as independently as possible.
 
"That's why our government closed the province's last remaining facilities and transitioned to community supports and services," Jacek said in a release.
 
 
The institutions involved in the settlement are: Adult Occupational Centre in Edgar, Bluewater Centre in Goderich, D'Arcy Place in Cobourg, Durham Centre for the Developmentally Handicapped in Whitby, L.S. Penrose Centre in Kingston, Midwestern Regional Centre in Palmerston, Muskoka Centre in Gravenhurst, Northwestern Regional Centre in Thunder Bay, Oxford Mental Health Centre and Oxford Regional Centre in Woodstock, Pine Ridge Centre in Aurora, Prince Edward Heights in Picton and St. Lawrence Regional Centre in Brockville.
 
Two similar class actions were also settled by the province two years ago.
 
A $35-million settlement in the case of residents at the Huronia Regional Centre in Orillia was approved by a court in December 2013. A $32.7-million settlement involving former residents of the Rideau Regional Centre in Smiths Falls and the Southwestern Regional Centre near Chatham was approved in February 2014.
 
The Huronia settlement led Premier Kathleen Wynne to apologize in the Ontario legislature for the suffering the residents experienced there.

MORE National ARTICLES

Suspect In Trafficking Of Girl, 14, Opts To Stay In Jail Cell Over Facing Media

Suspect In Trafficking Of Girl, 14, Opts To Stay In Jail Cell Over Facing Media
A Halifax-area man accused of trafficking a 14-year-old girl skipped a court appearance Monday, preferring to stay in jail because he didn't want to face the media, his lawyer said.

Suspect In Trafficking Of Girl, 14, Opts To Stay In Jail Cell Over Facing Media

Former Paramedic Finds Hope, Healing, Raising Awareness Of Post-Traumatic Stress

Former Paramedic Finds Hope, Healing, Raising Awareness Of Post-Traumatic Stress
Forty-five-year-old Terrance Kosikar has just finished a gruelling physical test flipping a nearly 200 kilogram tractor tire through the back roads towards Whistler, B.C., while wearing nearly 25 kilograms of steel chain.

Former Paramedic Finds Hope, Healing, Raising Awareness Of Post-Traumatic Stress

KBR To Do Engineering, Design Work For Proposed Woodfibre LNG Project In B.C.

KBR To Do Engineering, Design Work For Proposed Woodfibre LNG Project In B.C.
A Houston-based company has been selected to do engineering and design work for the proposed Woodfibre liquefied natural gas project north of Vancouver.

KBR To Do Engineering, Design Work For Proposed Woodfibre LNG Project In B.C.

CTV News In Halifax Fined $4,000 For Violating Youth Criminal Justice Act

CTV News In Halifax Fined $4,000 For Violating Youth Criminal Justice Act
During a sentencing hearing today, provincial court was told the broadcaster violated a publication ban on the identities of the two teens in a youth court case in Halifax on Aug. 24.

CTV News In Halifax Fined $4,000 For Violating Youth Criminal Justice Act

'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators

'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators
Former Supreme Court justice Ian Binnie has ruled that 14 senators who owed $322,611 properly billed the Senate for travel and hospitality expenses half the time

'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators

Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar

Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar
Denyse Thompson says her 14-year-old daughter was saving for a vacation, but preferred not to discuss how much money she lost to the thief. 

Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar