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Ongoing Class Actions

Class Action Against Attorneys General of Québec and Canada for Underfunding of Child and Essential Services for Indigenous Youth

Update: July 30, 2024- Authorization of Class Action and filing of Class Action Lawsuit

We are very pleased to announce that on April 30, 2024, the Superior Court of Québec rendered a judgment  authorizing the class action instituted by Kugler Kandestin, Sotos, Alexeev Attorneys and Coupal Chauvelot, for the benefit of Inuit youth in Nunavik, Indigenous youth living off-reserve in Québec, as well as the caregiving parents and grandparents of those youth.

As a result, the Class Action Lawsuit was filed.

The case alleges that Canada abandoned its constitutional obligations to off-reserve Indigenous children and families by delegating their welfare and protection to the provinces without ensuring adequate standards and funding were in place to safeguard their wellbeing and preserve their culture. Left to an under-funded provincial welfare system that prioritized family breakups over keeping families together through prevention, Indigenous youth and their families were made to suffer discrimination and emotional harm compounded by the legacy of the Residential School system and the Sixties Scoop.

The decision in A.B. et al. v. Attorney-General of Quebec et al. cites decades of reports and studies into Quebec’s child welfare system that decried the lack of adequate funding and training that could have prevented or lessened the mass removals. In one report on the state of the child welfare system in Nunavik, Québec’s Human Rights Commission found “the fundamental rights of the children and young people, as recognized in sections 1, 4 and 39 of Québec’s Charter of human rights and freedoms, have been infringed.”

To inform you of your rights, we encourage you to speak with one of the lawyers if you or someone you know is an Inuit youth in Nunavik, an Indigenous youth living off-reserve in Québec, or the caregiving parent or grandparent of that youth and:

  • Have been reported to Youth Protection;
  • Have been denied or delayed receipt of health and social services or products from the government.

Your communications with us are free and will be kept strictly confidential.

Alexandre Brosseau-Wery
514-360-8865
awery@kklex.com
Emily Painter
epainter@kklex.com
514-360-3462

We will continue to update this page as the case progresses.

Update: September 23, 2023 - Re-modified Application for Authorization to Institute Class Action

Kugler Kandestin, Sotos and Coupal Chauvelot have filed a re-modified Application for Authorization to Institute a Class Action in the Superior Court of Québec.

The hearing on the authorization of this class action took place on September 25 and 26, 2023 at the Superior Court of Québec in Montreal.

The proposed class action seeks to represent and provide access to justice to:

  • All Inuit children in Nunavik who were removed from their homes while they were under the age of 18, since November 11, 1975;
  • All Inuit children in Nunavik who were denied prompt access to an essential service, since November 11, 1975;
  • All off-reserve Indigenous children in Québec who were removed from their homes while they were under the age of 18, since 1992; and
  • The caregiving parents and grandparents of those children.

The class action seeks damages for two types of claims:

  • Child Services: It is alleged that Canada and Québec (1) did not adequately fund child services for indigenous children; (2) implemented funding structures and policies that prioritized removing Indigenous children from their homes instead of providing Indigenous parents with services to care for their children at home; (3) failed to consider placing Indigenous children in customary care; and (4) placed Indigenous youth in culturally and physically unsafe settings, in which the children had limited to no access to their families, communities, cultures, or languages.
  • Essential Services: Second, it alleges that the governments of Canada and Québec failed to provide or was delayed in providing health and social services and products because of the governments’ refusal to recognize and/or properly apply Jordan’s Principle/Inuit Child First Initiative.

Jordan’s Principle/Inuit Child First Initiative are legal principles which require the government to pay for and deliver health and social services to First Nations and Inuit youth on a level substantively equal to non-Indigenous youth. These principles also provide that the government cannot deny or delay these services and/or products on the grounds that it is the responsibility of another level of government or department.