No obligation to protect aboriginal identity during ’60s Scoop, feds say
TORONTO — The federal government had no legal obligation to prevent on-reserve children from losing their aboriginal identities after placement in non-indigenous homes during the so-called ’60s Scoop, an Ontario court heard Thursday.
In urging a class action to be thrown out, a government lawyer also argued that the notion of aboriginal culture or identity is too fuzzy to render such an obligation — had it existed — legally enforceable.
The 2009 lawsuit seeks $1.3 billion on behalf of about 16,000 indigenous children in Ontario who claim they were harmed by being placed in non-aboriginal homes from 1965 to 1984 under terms of a federal-provincial agreement.
While the arguments are legally complex, one key element of the plaintiffs’ claim is that the government never consulted Indian bands about the child-welfare program as required by the 1965 agreement — a point seized on by Ontario Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba.


