Toronto Sixties Scoop rally pushes back against government settlement - Action News
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Indigenous

Toronto Sixties Scoop rally pushes back against government settlement

A series of rallies across the country were held Friday in support of survivors of the Sixties Scoop, with some advocating for a better settlement than the one announced last fall by the federal government.

'The settlement feels a bit like a payout to silence the community,' says organizer

Percy Lezard, a Sixties Scoop survivor from B.C., and Min Kaur at the rally for Sixties Scoop survivors at Allan Gardens in Toronto on Friday. (Rhiannon Johnson/CBC)

A series of rallies across the country were held Friday in support of survivors of the Sixties Scoop, with someadvocating for a bettersettlement than the one announced last fall by the federal government.

That settlement aims to compensate all First Nations and Inuit children who were removed from their homes and communities and lost their cultural identities as a result between 1951 and 1991.

The National Indigenous survivors of Child Welfare network organized the rallies to push back against theproposed $800-million settlement.

Rev. Evan Smith organized of the Toronto Sixties Scoop survivor rally. (CBC )

"The settlement amount was not nearly enough;it was less than what we were asking for just in Ontario," saidRev. Evan Smith at the Toronto rally at Allan Gardens.

"It isn't enough to cover the trauma and abuse a lot of folks went through."

Smith isAnishinaabeand part of the Toronto Urban Native Ministry.

There has also been tension aroundthe settlement as Mtis and non-status First Nations survivors were not included,although the Mtis National Council has now entered into negotiations with Canada.

"It's another strategy of ongoing colonialism and genocide to pitFirst Nations folks against Mtis folks because with the current settlement those folks are excluded," saidPercyLezard.

Lezard, a survivor of the Sixties Scoop, is a social workerand atwo-spirited non-binary Indigenous person fromPentictonIndianReserve in B.C.

Criticism of the settlement process say that it has been too vague.

"It feels really disorganized and it feels really quick," said Smith.

"The settlement feels a bit like a payout to silence the community."

Chief Stacey Laforme of the Mississaugas of New Credit attended the Toronto Sixties Scoop rally. (Rhiannon Johnson/CBC)

Smith added there's been little information since it came out about who is actually eligible.

"Lots of people filed claims and as far as Iknow most people haven't heard any news from lawyers about whether or not their claims were actually making them eligible."

A petition to scuttle the proposed $800-million settlement that is making its way across Canada ignited a disagreement that lead to the cancellation of the rally in Winnipeg this afternoon.

Indigenous communities in Canada remain divided on whether or not to accept the proposed settlement. Some are calling for more money, whereothers wanta fair negotiating process that includes Mtis and non-status First Nations survivors.

"Any settlements that they offer like this are divisive because people are hurt, people are trying to recover and yet there are those who will find different ways forward,"said Chief R. StaceyLaforme of theMississaugasof New Credit.

"So when you have things like this, of course they're going to cause some form of divisiveness."