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Dollar value of resources to be debated as final stage of treaty annuities trial begins

Dollar value of resources to be debated as final stage of treaty annuities trial begins

CBC
Tuesday, January 31, 2023 12:04:13 PM UTC

The final stage of a complex trial over the payment of treaty annuities in northern Ontario kicked off Monday with one group of plaintiffs pursuing negotiations and the other in court panning the provincial government.

The case concerns a clause in the 1850 Robinson Huron and Robinson Superior treaties between the Anishinaabe of the upper Great Lakes and the Crown, which promises to increase the annual payment, or annuity, as the territory produces more wealth.

The annuity hasn't increased since 1874, when it was capped at $4 per person. In the previous stages of the trial, the Anishinaabe successfully argued this breaks the treaty, a ruling the Ontario government appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada.

While that's scheduled for the fall, the trial continues in Ontario's Superior Court of Justice in Sudbury.

Harley Schachter, lawyer for the Robinson Superior treaty signatories, argued in court Monday that Ontario's experts have dreamed up a "counterfactual world that doesn't exist" by suggesting the modern-day value of the resources taken from the land is negative $11 billion.

This would mean the Anishinaabe are owed nothing in compensation for resources taken from their territory for 173 years.

"Ontario's vision remains an impoverished vision of the ongoing future treaty relationship, and that does not bode well," he said.

"There can be no assurance that any healing is on the horizon."

Alternative accounting models go as high as $193 billion, Schachter said, and the plaintiffs plan to call Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz to calculate the value of the resources taken from the territory.

The court split the case into three stages due to its complexity, with stage one concerning whether the Crown is duty-bound to increase the annuity. Stage two concerned whether defendants Canada and Ontario could claim Crown immunity.

The plaintiffs have won so far, but the future of the case is far from certain. Stage three concerns liability: who should pay and how much.

Schacter filed a claim in 1999 on behalf of Redrock First Nation and Whitesand First Nation. Twenty-one other Anishinaabe bands formed the Robinson Huron Treaty Litigation Fund and filed their own case in 2012.

While separate, the two groups participated in the same trial.

The Robinson Huron group however is now in settlement talks mediated by retired senator and former Truth and Reconciliation Commission chair Murray Sinclair.

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