Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen Mcneil Apologizes To Former Residents Of 'Colored' Orphanage

The Canadian Press , 10 Oct, 2014 11:45 PM
    HALIFAX - Premier Stephen McNeil apologized Friday for the abuse that former residents of the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children suffered, acknowledging that their pleas for help went unanswered in what he described was one chapter in the province's history of systemic racism.
     
    The formal apology came after years of a struggle for recognition by the former residents of the Halifax orphanage, some of whom were in the legislature and stood in applause when the gesture was delivered.
     
    "It is one of the great tragedies in our province's history that your cries for help were greeted with silence for so long," McNeil said.
     
    "Some of you had said that you felt invisible. Well I want to say to you today you are invisible no longer. We hear your voices and we grieve your pain and we are sorry."
     
    The trauma and neglect that the former residents, some of whom have since died, is something no child should ever have experienced, McNeil added.
     
    "An apology is not the closing of the books, but a recognition that we must cast an unflinching eye at the past as we strive towards a better future," he said.
     
    Tony Smith, one of the former residents who led the fight for public and legal recognition, said he was thankful for the apology and told the audience inside the legislature's Red Room that he used to be ashamed to say he once lived in the home.
     
    "I'm proud to say that I am a former resident of the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children," Smith said. "This historical apology is an apology we, the former residents, dreamed of but believed this dream would never come to light."
     
    Former resident Harriet Johnson stood beside her father as she credited him for encouraging her not to give up the fight for justice.
     
    "There were times when I said, 'Dad, no one is going to listen to us, they are just going to sweep this under the carpet,'" said Johnson. "So I'm very happy."
     
    People who lived in the home as children allege that they were subjected to physical, psychological and sexual abuse over several decades up until the 1980s.
     
    In March 2012, the RCMP and Halifax police began urging people to come forward with their allegations.
     
    Investigators interviewed 40 complainants in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario and Alberta, but by December of that year police said the information collected didn't support the laying of criminal charges because it could not be corroborated.
     
    Class-action lawsuits were launched by the former residents against the home and the provincial government, which eventually ended in settlements totalling $34 million. The home came to a $5-million settlement with the plaintiffs in July 2013 and the Nova Scotia Supreme Court approved a $29-million award from the province a year later.
     
    The lawyer who represents the former residents has said nearly 250 people who lived at the home from 1921 until 1989 are eligible for the class-action settlement payouts.
     
    That agreement is before the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, where a judge has asked the law firm who worked on the case for the plaintiffs to provide a legal precedent to support their proposal to have people who joined the lawsuit in later years absorb some of the legal costs of the earlier claimants.
     
    The lawyers have asked to be paid $6.6 million in legal fees, a proposal also subject to court approval. A ruling is expected Thursday.
     
    The Liberal government has also promised to hold a public inquiry into the alleged abuse.
     
    McNeil said the terms of reference will be set out to give former residents an opportunity to publicly share their stories, something that should happen early next year.
     
    "This is not an inquiry that will be loaded up with lawyers. It's an inquiry that's about healing," he said Friday.
     
    Former resident Tracey Dorrington-Skinner said she hopes the process will hear from as many people as possible.
     
    The apology offered Friday served as validation and was a good first step on the road to healing, she said.
     
    "The journey continues and I just hope that everyone takes advantage of the offer from the government to seek the help that they need," she said.
     
    The home is now a short-term residential facility for children of all races.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns
    KELOWNA, B.C. - Mounties in Kelowna, B.C., are looking for a sixth teenager after arresting five others in connection with an attempted robbery involving bats and replica guns.

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today
    VANCOUVER - A Vancouver woman convicted of killing her two newborn sons is expected to find out her sentence on Tuesday morning.

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media
    The move will make the owner of the National Post, and a slate of other digital news properties, a significantly larger national media player and allow it to tap further into the struggling newspaper industry as it builds its online network of websites.

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at  Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA
    The agency says officers who were monitoring the off-loading of baggage from a flight that arrived in Toronto from Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, on Sept. 25 observed "anomalies" with one of the bags.

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war
    OTTAWA - Canadian CF-18s will soon be heading off to war in Iraq, leaving Parliament and the public in a fog about some key elements of the military commitment — notably what efforts will be made to limit civilian casualties.

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war

    CP Freight Train Strikes, Kills Teenaged Girl in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

    CP Freight Train Strikes, Kills Teenaged Girl in B.C.'s Fraser Valley
    The B.C. Coroners Service says 16-year-old Tiffany Williams was walking on railway tracks in Maple Ridge early Sunday afternoon when she was struck by an eastbound Canadian Pacific (TSX:CP) freight train.

    CP Freight Train Strikes, Kills Teenaged Girl in B.C.'s Fraser Valley