Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2015 12:50 PM
    SASKATOON — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says the province will formally apologize for decades-old policies that saw aboriginal adoptees taken from their homes and placed with non-native families.
     
    But Wall says Saskatchewan will not offer cash to the victims of the so-called '60s Scoop because the province feels it is not a "compensatory issue."
     
    "I am telling you, the government is not entering into this with the idea of compensating with cash — some sort of a cash payment — for those in this issue," Wall said Wednesday during a break in a cabinet meeting in Saskatoon. 
     
    "That's not the direction we're intending. We want to move forward and deal with the ongoing issues that exist. We want to make sure there is a broader knowledge about the Scoop, which there isn't, frankly."
     
    Wall said his government will work with aboriginal groups in the coming months to ensure the apology can be given earnestly, but he did not say when it will be delivered.
     
    "We are going to have our respective ministers — the minister of social services, the minister of First Nations and Metis relations and myself — meet with First Nations and Metis leaders, aboriginal leaders in the province to make sure we get it right."
     
    An estimated 20,000 aboriginal children across Canada were taken by child-welfare agents starting in the 1960s and placed with non-aboriginal families.
     
    It has been acknowledged the practice stripped those children of their language, culture and traditions. It is said to have had a similar impact to that of residential schools. Some victims have described it as being treated like pets.
     
    Class-action lawsuits are in the process of being launched in Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan.
     
    "I phoned my mother today and we were both crying," said Robert Doucette, the president of Metis Nation-Saskatchewan, who was taken from his family as a baby and placed in a foster home.
     
    He said the apology is important and his mother wants to be at the legislature when it happens.
     
    It wasn't only children who suffered, Doucette said. So did their parents and grandparents.
     
    Last week, Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger apologized on behalf of his government and didn't rule out providing compensation.
     
    "I feel that the families need support," he said at the time. "If they think there is a role for compensation and we think that's going to be an important part of it, we will consider that in the future."
     
    Wall noted that attempts to remove culture from children in the past wasn't limited to just aboriginals. He said his father was encouraged not to speak the Mennonite language of Plautdietsch, with disciplinary measures in school if he did.
     
    "That's not an immoral equivalency of the Scoop, but I am saying: What the Scoop was about was removing aboriginal culture and language from kids, from a people," he said. 
     
    "That's just wrong."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants

    Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants
    Brandie Bloor, 39, pleaded guilty in provincial court Thursday to fraud over $5,000 and identity theft but will have to wait until late June for Judge Len Marchand to hand down his sentence.

    Crime Of Vanity & Greed: Kamloops Woman Steals Identity Of An Elderly Man To Pay For Breast Implants

    Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction

    Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction
    ARMSTRONG, B.C. — A llama that went on the lam before it could be auctioned off has a new home after his antics stopped traffic on a highway in Armstrong, B.C.

    Llama On The Run Gets New Home After Adventurous Escape From B.C. Auction

    Crown Tells Jury In Trial Of Alleged B.C. Terrorists Not To Pity Accused Couple

    Crown lawyer Peter Eccles said a life of hardship for John Nuttall and Amanda Korody — as recovering heroin addicts living on welfare — doesn't make them any less guilty of planning a terrorist act.

    Crown Tells Jury In Trial Of Alleged B.C. Terrorists Not To Pity Accused Couple

    El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season

    El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season
    VANCOUVER — Experts are blaming El Nino for speeding up nature's clock and forcing firefighters to deploy weeks ahead of normal to battle wildfires across rural Western Canada.

    El Nino Leaves Western Canada 'High And Dry' To Ignite Active Wildfire Season

    Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite

    Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite
    Police say they responded to a call late Tuesday night about a 21-year-old man who was rushed to hospital from his campsite near the Prophet River First Nation.

    Police Near Fort Nelson, B.C., Investigate Shooting Of Man At Campsite

    Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails

    Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails
    Tim Duncan says a ministerial assistant in Todd Stone's Victoria office ordered him to trash the material last November, but when he hesitated the assistant deleted them himself, saying, "you don't have to worry about it anymore."

    Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails