Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau To Apologize In Labrador For Residential Schools Nov. 24: Lawyer

The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2017 04:02 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A lawyer for former residential school students excluded from a national apology in 2008 says Justin Trudeau will be in Labrador on Nov. 24 to apologize.
     
    Steven Cooper says the Prime Minister's Office has confirmed he'll be in Goose Bay for an event that's expected to include about 300 people.
     
    About 1,000 class-action members accepted a $50-million package from the federal government to settle claims of abuse and cultural losses.
     
    A spokesman for Trudeau could not be immediately reached.
     
    Former prime minister Stephen Harper excluded the province's former residential schools from an apology and compensation package, saying they were different.
     
    But lawyers for students of four schools in Labrador and one in Newfoundland argued Ottawa owed the same duty of care to them after the province joined Confederation in 1949.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Half Of Canadians Trust Self-Driving Cars, 30% Would Replace Their Vehicle: Survey

    Half Of Canadians Trust Self-Driving Cars, 30% Would Replace Their Vehicle: Survey
    About half of Canadian consumers surveyed say they trust autonomous vehicles to get them to their destination but only 30 per cent would replace their current vehicle with a self-driving car.

    Half Of Canadians Trust Self-Driving Cars, 30% Would Replace Their Vehicle: Survey

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds
    SASKATOON — An imam who was called to a Saskatoon school after a kindergarten student died says the Muslim boy's attendant told him the tragedy happened in seconds.

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report
    TORONTO — The federal government says at least 2,816 deaths in 2016 were linked to the opioid crisis and that number "will almost certainly" surpass 3,000 in 2017.

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards
    MP Aldag is inviting you to nominate the Cloverdale-Langley City resident you believe has made an outstanding contribution.

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect
    Achutha N Reddy was an alumnus of Osmania Medical College and had been practising in Kansas since 1989.

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer
    Chan, 50, learned he had nasopharyngeal carcinoma not long after he won his Toronto-area seat of Scarborough—Agincourt in a 2014 byelection.

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer