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								Catholic
										Church withholding millions from victims, alleges government
							 
							
								CBC News  February 19, 2014    http://www.cbc.ca/news/aboriginal/catholic-church-withholding-millions-from-victims-alleges-government-1.2542363 
								 
							 
							
								
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									| A class practises penmanship
										at the Red Deer Indian Industrial School in Alberta, circa
										1914 to 1919 | 
								 
							 
							 
							
								
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									| Denise Guimond attended the
										Sagkeeng Residential School in Manitoba and wants the Catholic
										Church to pay its share of helping survivors. | 
								 
							 
							 
							Court documents obtained by CBC News allege that the
								Catholic Church is withholding millions from former students of
								Indian residential schools.  
							
								The church was part of the Indian residential school settlement
								reached in 2006. While the government paid the
									lion’s share of the billion-dollar settlement, the
									churches were also required to make reparations.
							 
							
							The Anglican, Presbyterian and United churches have met
								their obligations, but according to the federal government, the
								Catholic Church is shirking its responsibility.  
							The Aboriginal Healing Foundation is one organization that
								was slated to receive funds from the Catholic Church.  
							
								"We're trying to get blood from a
									stone," says Mike DeGagne, former
									head of the organization.
							 
							He says the foundation was supposed to receive
								$29 million from the church. 
							"But then, the Catholics were allowed to subtract a
								number of expenses they'd already incurred, so it got down
								to about $18 million and about $1.6 million is still
								outstanding." 
							Ottawa claims those expenses should have gone directly to
								the foundation, and is critical of the church for claiming
								legal expenses as administrative costs.  
							
								"The net effect of this accounting approach is
									to reduce the overall amounts that are paid to the Aboriginal
									Healing Foundation, and to give preference to the
									Corporation's administrative costs, including their
									lawyers' fees, at the expense of former students of Indian
									Residential Schools."
							 
							Ottawa also points out the Catholic groups committed
								to fundraise $25 million as a part of the settlement, but
								so far have only raised a fraction of that. 
							
								With funding from Ottawa, the Catholic Church ran
									more than 70 per cent of the residential schools, which
									operated from the late 1800s to
									the 1990s.
							 
							
								Denise Guimond attended one
									of those schools for five years.
							 
							
								"It's disheartening to know, because
									they're rich and there's no reason why they can't
									pay their portion or their part in supporting the
									survivors.… The churches should be paying actually to
									the organizations that are actually helping."
							 
							Pierre Baribeau, a lawyer in Montreal and director of
								the Catholic Entities corporation, says the Catholic Church
								will fight these allegations in court. 
							"The federal government has always adopted an
								aggressive attitude towards the Catholic Entities and we have
								offered reconciliation process to them and they firmly answered
								negatively, they don’t want to apply the agreement as
								negotiated in 2006, so we are going to present our arguments to
								the courts." 
							But DeGagne says the legal dispute sends a bad message to
								survivors.  
							
								"This is not about the person in the pews.
									Most Catholics have no idea their church isn't honouring their
									obligations and choosing to pay lawyers versus their
									obligations to survivors. If most Catholics knew
									this, they would be appalled."
							 
							
								Today, Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt said,
									"Canada is committed to implementation of settlement
									agreement, as this matter is before the court, this will be the
									extent of my comment on it."  
							 
							
								The case is scheduled to be heard in a Saskatoon
									court in June.
							 
							  
							
							
							
							
							
							
								 
								 
								 
							 
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