Jeremy’s case, Jordan’s principle

by MOIRA PETERS

Historic court case in Halifax identifies gap in health services for First Nations children

In a precedent-setting case that continued in Halifax on Monday, Maurina Beadle and Pictou Landing First Nation took the Government of Canada to court over its failure to provide Beadle’s son the same level of health care that a child living off-reserve would receive from the province of Nova Scotia.

On the fourth anniversary of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s historic apology to First Nations people for the forced separation of children from their families under the residential school system, the Mi’kmaq mother was in court fighting for the health services that would allow her son Jeremy to remain at home under her care.

“All the things that were promised in Harper’s apology are things they are not doing for Jeremy,” said Philippa Pictou, Health Director for Pictou Landing First Nation, sitting on a bench in courtroom 501 in the Law Courts on Lower Water Street in Halifax on Monday morning. “Kids being pushed into institutions, instead of being cared for at home.”

The Dominion for more