Mtis, non-status Indians await crucial rights ruling from court - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 08:22 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Mtis, non-status Indians await crucial rights ruling from court

The Federal Court of Appeal will release its decision today on whether Mtis and non-status Indians should be counted as Indians under the Constitution.

Federal Court of Appeal expected to release major ruling in Harry Daniels Case

National Vice-Chief Ron Swain looks on as Congress of Aboriginal Peoples National Chief Betty Ann Lavalle responds to a question during a news conference about the impact of a federal court decision on Mtis and non-status Indians on Jan. 8, 2013 in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The Federal Court of Appeal will release its decision todayon whether Mtis and non-status Indians should be counted as Indians under the Constitution.

Mtis and non-status Indians say they are in limbo in terms of education, health and social services because the provinces and Ottawa continue to point to the other as to whoisresponsible for providing services.

"A casualty of that standoff has been a very large body of people," said Joe Magnet, the lead counsel for the plaintiff, in an interview with CBC News."This population of 800,000 or so non-status Indians andMtis people have been recorded as the most disadvantaged of all Canadians."

Mtisand non-status Indiansargue that they should be counted as Indiansunder theConstitutionAct andtherefore, it should be the federal government that assumes responsibility for them.

It could be one of the most significant cases dealing with aboriginal peoples in Canadian history. It has the potential of completely changing the landscape of aboriginal-Canadian relations.- University of Ottawa law professor Larry Chartrand

The case began in 1999 whenformer Congress of Aboriginal Peoples' leader Harry Daniels, who died in 2004, took the federal government to court. After more than a dozen years of legal wrangling, the case finally went to trial in May 2011. It took a Federal Court judge a year and a half to release his ruling that approximately 600,000Mtisand non-status Indians do fall under federal jurisdiction.

That decision meant they could negotiate access to federal programs and services long denied to them.

The federal government appealed.

If the Federal Court of Appeal rules against Ottawa again, it could bolster the plaintiffs' case when it, most likely, ends up at the Supreme Court.

"It could be one of the most significant cases dealing with aboriginal peoples in Canadian history," said University of Ottawa law professor Larry Chartrand in an interview with CBC News. "It has the potential of completely changing the landscape of aboriginal-Canadian relations."

The federal government has estimated it would cost taxpayers $4billion a year if Ottawa had to assume responsibility.

ButCongress of Aboriginal Peoples' National Chief Betty Ann Lavalle says that's just speculation.

"That's just fear-mongering. We don't know at this point. Nobody can project," Lavale said in an interview. "To me, that's just another way of trying to turn the public's opinion against us."

Magnet adds that, regardless, somebody has to pay for the programs and this case is simply about clarifying which level of government that should be.

So far, the federal government has spent $9 millionin legal costs fighting the case.