No liability for harm caused by ’60s Scoop, federal government set to argue
TORONTO — At-risk aboriginal children placed in non-aboriginal homes during the so-called ’60s Scoop may well have suffered harm by losing their cultural identities but the federal government cannot now be held liable, Ottawa argues in new court filings.
As a result, the government plans to press an Ontario Superior Court justice on Thursday to dismiss a landmark $1.3-billion class action, filed on behalf of thousands of those children in 2009, that argues Canada failed to protect their cultural heritage with devastating consequences.
“On-reserve Indian children who were determined to be in need of protection and were, as part of the child-protection regime of the day, placed in non-aboriginal foster homes or raised in non-aboriginal adoptive homes (would) have lost opportunities to remain connected to their families and to their language and culture,” the attorney general states.
“Many foster and adoptive children faced with such circumstances experienced psychological or other personal harms.”


