Sunday, June 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Victims Of Lac-Megantic Disaster Close To Receiving Part Of $450-million Fund

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2015 12:06 PM
    MONTREAL — Lawyers for victims of the Lac-Megantic train disaster are recommending their clients accept a motion that would allow Canadian Pacific Railway to stop blocking hundreds of millions of dollars in settlement money, an attorney said Thursday.
     
    Jeff Orenstein, whose Consumer Law Group represents the victims of the derailment, said attorneys from all sides have agreed to recommend giving Canadian Pacific (TSX:CP) legal assurances in exchange for it dropping its appeal against the $450-million fund.
     
    He said his clients and the Quebec government — also plaintiffs in the case — still need to be consulted and haven't yet given the green light to the motion that was recently tabled by lawyers for Montreal Maine and Atlantic Railroad (MMA), the now-defunct firm at the centre of the disaster that killed 47 people on July 6, 2013.
     
    Orenstein said he and the attorneys for the Quebec government "would support the motion. But neither of us felt comfortable saying we agree without both of our clients saying officially they also agreed."
     
    He said Quebec Superior Court Justice Gaetan Dumas has given them until Tuesday evening to confirm, in writing, that the motion is officially accepted by all sides.
     
    If that happens, CP has said it will drop its appeal and the settlement money could begin to be distributed to victims by the end of the year.
     
    MMA didn't have enough insurance to pay damages to victims and creditors, so it filed for bankruptcy in the United States and Canada. The settlement fund is tied to the bankruptcy proceedings in both countries.
     
    CP has been the only company accused in the derailment to not participate in the settlement fund and over the summer sought leave to appeal the fund.
     
    All the other companies that offered money to victims were to be released from legal liability for the derailment.
     
    CP objected to the motion for several reasons, notably because the company thought it wouldn't be able to defend itself if it was taken to court by any of the firms released from legal liability.
     
    MMA's motion offers CP legal assurances that if it is taken to court and loses, it can't be asked to pay for the same damages already paid out by other firms, Orenstein said.
     
    Patrice Benoit, lawyer for MMA, said Thursday that CP can still be held liable for the derailment.
     
    "There is absolutely no concession that has been granted to Canadian Pacific," he said outside the courtroom in Granby, Que., 80 kilometres east of Montreal.
     
    "What Canadian Pacific has offered — and what we have accepted subject to us agreeing on the language — is to withdraw all its appeals in Canada and the United States."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency
    In what the Appeal Court called "most unusual" circumstances, the justices said a lower court was wrong to deny Golam Mehedi a chance to reopen his case given the post-trial broadcast.

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean
    Aldean's 2015 Burn It Down tour played in Kamloops, B.C., on Monday night and was headed to a Tuesday performance in Prince George, when all those cliches about trucks, dirt roads and disaster played out.

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos
    It's called SNOLAB, a cavernous "clean" lab that was able to detect minuscule particles known as neutrinos. 

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

    Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship

    Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship
    The four Indians are Anita Abraham, Ritesh Kotak, Mrinalini Menon and Pam Sethi.

    Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship

    Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings

    Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings
    Leslie Greenwood is accused of being the getaway driver in slayings in which another Nova Scotia man, Robert Simpson, has admitted to being the killer.

    Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings

    Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars

    Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars
    Police say three buffaloes got loose from a nearby farm and one made its way onto the QEW around 6 a.m. in Niagara Falls, Ont.

    Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars