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Residential school survivors targeted for payments
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Filed Under: First Nations

Former students of Native residential schools have been offered loans, cars and big-ticket items now that their settlement checks are coming in.

Stella Smoke, who lives on the Dakota Plains Reserve in Manitoba, said she is sick of the calls. "I think they must just be guessing, unless they're getting the information off somebody," she told The Globe and Mail.

A car dealership in Regina, Saskatchewan, put up a sign that said "We Welcome First Nations." But the owner was forced to take it down after complaints from the public.

"The whole of Saskatchewan knows this is going on with the residential schools money," the owner, who declined to give his name, said. "Fifty per cent of our business is with these cultures, and we were just trying to say, 'Welcome, come on in, look around, meet our staff.'

Each former student receives a $10,000, plus $3,000 for each additional year in school.

Get the Story:
Businesses eye natives' settlement money (The Globe and Mail 12/6)

Relevant Links:
Residential Schools Claims - http://www.residentialschools.ca
Assembly of First Nations - http://www.afn.ca
Indian Residential Schools Resolution Department - http://www.irsr-rqpi.gc.ca/english

Related Stories:
Lawyers paid $45M in residential school case (11/27)
Canada slow on residential school payments (11/05)
Residential school survivors targeted for payments (10/26)
Canada makes first residential school payment (10/05)
Former residential school students await payout (9/25)
Canada finalizes $1.9B residential school deal (9/20)
Residential school students warned of scams (08/31)
Residential school abuse settlement accepted (08/21)
Canada House apologizes for Native student abuse (05/03)
Former residential school official in court (03/06)
Lawyers to discuss Native abuse settlement (2/15)
Law firm says $1.9B abuse settlement held up (2/2)
Canada says $1.9B abuse payout won't be held up (2/1)
Delay in residential school abuse settlement (1/29)
Canada delays residential school abuse case (1/18)

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