'Unprecedented': 5 Indigenous lawyers elected to B.C. Law Society leadership in major victory - Action News
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British Columbia

'Unprecedented': 5 Indigenous lawyers elected to B.C. Law Society leadership in major victory

Five Indigenous lawyers have been elected to the leadership of the Law Society of B.C. in a result the victors are hoping will help to transform the province's legal profession.

Prior to current election only 2 Indigenous benchers have been elected in society's 137 year history

From left to right, Indigenous lawyers Brian Dybwad, Lindsay LeBlanc, Kelly Russ and Katrina Harry have all been elected as benchers for the Law Society of B.C. in a co-ordinated campaign to get greater representation. (Canadian Bar Association B.C.)

Five Indigenous lawyers have been elected to the leadership of the Law Society of B.C. in a result the victors are hoping will help to transform the province's legal profession.

West Vancouver lawyer Kelly Russ said his phone was "blowing up" with messages of congratulations Tuesday after the law society posted the results of an election to fill 19 available spots for the so-called benchers who oversee the body.

Russ was one of four Indigenous lawyers who mounted a co-ordinated campaign for election. He said he was stunned to learn that they were all successful and that a fifth lawyer who identifies as Mtisalso won his race independently.

Until this week, only two Indigenous lawyers had been elected as benchers since the law society was formally incorporated in 1884.

"It's quite a moment," Russ said.

"One hundred and thirty-seven years later. We've finally turned the corner enmasse."

'Unprecedented and a significant milestone'

A total of 25 electedbenchersact collectively as directors of the LSBCand regulators of the profession, as well as individually as adjudicators, to "promote and protect" public interest, according to the society.

In addition to thebenchers chosen to serve two-year terms, the government also appoints up to six members to represent the public interest. The society says some of thoseappointedhave been Indigenous.

A photo of The Law Society of BC sign.
The Law Society of B.C. called the election of five Indigenous lawyers as benchers 'unprecedented and a significant milestone.' (Jon Hernandez/CBC)

About 2.73 per cent of the organization's nearly 14,000 members 359 lawyersidentified as Indigenous in 2020.

Russ and fellow lawyersKatrina Harry,Brian Dybwad and Lindsay LeBlanccampaigned togetherto highlight the need for greater Indigenous representation in B.C.'s legal profession.

Fort St. Johnlawyer Georges Rivard who says he traces his Mtisroots back to the 1500swas not part of the group effort but was electedto one of two spots available in the Cariboo district.

"The election of five Indigenous lawyers is unprecedented and a significant milestone in the Law Society's ongoing efforts to increase the involvement of Indigenous people in its governance," the law society said in a statement to CBC.

"The Law Society is committed to advancing reconciliation and to fostering diversity and inclusivity."

'Incredibly proud to be a lawyer today'

Harry, who is a member of the Shuswap Nation, is manager of Indigenous Services at Legal Aid BC.

"I'm felling incredibly energized. I'm feeling very humbled. I'm feeling very proud," Harry said Tuesday.

"I'm incredibly proud to be a lawyer today, and even more proud to be an Indigenous lawyer."

Karen Snowshoe, second from left, was the first female Indigenous bencher elected to the B.C. Law Society. She is seen here in a 2017 image from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. (Dave Croft/CBC)

The election comes after a year in which the law society was forced to grapple with the meaning of reconciliation after a controversial disciplinary decision for alawyer who hired a paroled murderer to helpwith the files of residential school survivors.

The survivors later claimed the freed killer tried to extort their settlement money.

The society's first Indigenous female bencher, Karen Snowshoe, wrote a scathing dissent of the majority's decision to accept aone-month suspension and $4,000 fine for the lawyer in question.

She said the case "raised serious questions about the ability of the Law Society's regulatory process to engage, address and accommodate marginalized complainants and witnesses, particularly Indigenous persons."

In response to her recommendations, the society struck a task force to review its regulatory processes.

Benchers have alsoagreed to address issues identified bythe Truth and Reconciliation Commission's report, pilotinga coursefocusing on "the history of Aboriginal-Crown relations, the history and legacy of residential schools and how legislation regarding Indigenous peoples created the issues that reconciliation seeks to address."

All four of the candidates who campaigned together vowed to continue the work Snowshoe started.

'I think it will be inspirational'

Russsaid the result of the election was unprecedented. He saidbencherssit on the committees that discuss courtroom policies which means the influence of the new slate could have a tangible impact for the public.

"It will be significant. I think it will be inspirational for other Indigenous lawyers coming up through the ranks," he said.

"It's an opportunity for the law society and us to break down the barriers of acceptance that may have existed, in some people's minds, of the law society and how we can influence the legal profession as benchers, as lawyers, as judges from an Indigenous perspective."

Both Harry and Russ spoke of the importance of bringing an "Indigenous lens" to B.C.'s justice system.

At the end of the day, they saidthey were both encouraged to see that when faced with a ballot, professional colleagues across the province chose overwhelmingly to give concrete support for reconciliation.

"This has been to me a reflection of a desire within the legal community to appreciate, respect andendorse Indigenous colleague lawyers and really value the perspective that being Indigenous in this society does bring to the role of lawyer," Harry said.

"It's a representation of the respect that Indigenous lawyers and Indigenous people are gaining in society."