Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

No one opts outs of $29M settlement over abuse allegations at Halifax orphanage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2014 08:19 AM
    HALIFAX - A lawyer for people covered by a $29-million class-action settlement over abuse allegations at a Halifax orphanage says no one has opted out of the deal.
     
    Ray Wagner says nearly 250 people are eligible and his law firm has received no written or verbal objections as of a midnight Monday deadline.
     
    Under the terms of the agreement, the provincial government can pull out of the deal at its discretion if five or more former residents withdrew.
     
    Former residents at the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children allege physical, psychological and sexual abuse over several decades at the orphanage that opened in 1921.
     
    None of the allegations have been tested in court.
     
    Wagner says people eligible for the deal are those who lived at the home between Jan. 1, 1921, and Dec. 31, 1989.
     
    He says there is a second phase to the settlement process that will address additional harms including sexual abuse for residents who lived at the home after Nov. 1, 1951.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Health Canada changing labels on controlled release opioids; stressing risks

    Health Canada changing labels on controlled release opioids; stressing risks
    Health Canada has changed the labelling for controlled release opioids in a bid to make clear the risks and safety concerns of the pain medications.

    Health Canada changing labels on controlled release opioids; stressing risks

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend
    Mounties are looking for a man who is alleged to have sexually assaulted several students at a central Alberta Bible college.

    Sexual assaults in dorm rooms at Alberta Bible college during freshman weekend

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack
    More than one-third of Canada's IT professionals know — for sure — that they'd had a significant data breach over the previous 12 months that could put their clients or their organizations at risk, a cybersecurity study suggests.

    Study estimates 36% of Canadian businesses know they've been hit by cyber attack

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau
    Health Minister Rona Ambrose denies the federal government's marijuana awareness campaign is aimed at Justin Trudeau.

    Health minister denies feds' anti-pot campaign aimed at Justin Trudeau

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property
    Police say a dead person was discovered on a property on the east side of Mackenzie and an investigation was started on Saturday....

    B.C. RCMP make an arrest after a suspicious death on a Mackenzie property

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province
    Bill Miller of the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako says controlled burns will start today around the 37-square-kilometre China Nose fire southeast of Houston....

    B.C. authorities use controlled burns to stifle wildfires in the province