Ottawa Removes Funding Caps for Residential School Searches
Ottawa is removing its recently imposed $500,000 cap for funding focused on locating or memorializing children who didn’t return home from residential schools.
The government has reversed last month’s decision to limit federal funding for the Residential Schools Missing Children Community Support program to $500,000 per community—a significant reduction from the previous annual cap of $3 million, says Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Gary Anandasangaree.
“Our intention was to fund as many initiatives as possible but we recognize that the lack of flexibility of these changes was a mistake,” Anandasangaree said on Aug. 16. “Communities know best what is needed to undertake this important work, on their own terms. We committed to being there alongside communities every step of the way. That commitment remains and I apologize for any hurt or re-traumatization these changes may have caused.”
The move comes after meeting with indigenous leaders and communities who expressed opposition to the funding reduction, Anandasangaree said.
The AMC on Aug. 16 said the government’s reversal marked a “significant moment.”
“The government’s acknowledgment of the need for flexibility and responsiveness to the concerns of First Nation communities underscores the importance of dialogue and collaboration in addressing the painful legacy of residential schools,” the group said in an emailed statement.
Project Funding
Ottawa budgeted $238.8 million for the fund in 2022, several months after the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation’s May 2021 report that the remains of 215 children were found using ground-penetrating radar around a former Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia’s Interior.
Anthropologist Sarah Beaulieu, who was in charge of the radar scanning at the Kamloops site, later revised the number to 200, saying previous excavations in the area could have influenced the results.