Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Manitoba decides not to appeal court ruling on child benefit payments

The Manitoba government has decided not to appeal a court ruling over hundreds of millions of dollars in child benefit payments – Aug 4, 2022

The Manitoba government has decided not to appeal a court ruling over hundreds of millions of dollars in child benefit payments.

Story continues below advertisement

In May, a Court of Queen’s Bench justice ruled the province violated the rights of Indigenous children in care by clawing back federal payments called the Children’s Special Allowance.

The money goes to agencies responsible for children in care and mirrors the Canada Child Benefit given to parents who are raising their kids.

The former NDP government started the clawback in 2006, and Indigenous leaders said the province collected more than $300 million over 13 years.

The daily email you need for Winnipeg's top news stories.

The Progressive Conservative government ended the clawback in 2019 but also passed a law to try to ban any legal action over it.

In a news release, the government does not say whether it will repay the money but promises a new group that will allow for Indigenous input on policies and legislation affecting Indigenous people.

Story continues below advertisement

“Our government is committed to working collaboratively with First Nations, Inuit and Metis leadership and communities to address past wrongs and support Indigenous-led solutions in the spirit of reconciliation,” Families Minister Rochelle Squires said in the news release.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article