Lawyers argue over how to proceed with Île-à-la-Crosse school lawsuits, as survivors call for closure
2022 class action for boarding school survivors wants similar 2005 'stalled' class action stayed

The lawyers from two competing class action suits were in a Saskatoon courtroom Wednesday. There they argued at length about the best way to represent Métis survivors of the Île-à-la-Crosse boarding school.
Survivors and intergenerational survivors of the school filled the Court of King's Bench courtroom, many dressed in orange — a reminder of the suffering children went through at the school.
Legal representatives and plaintiffs said survivors deserve compensation and recognition for physical, sexual and emotional abuse they endured at the boarding school. It operated in the Île-à-la-Crosse community, about 460 kilometres north of Saskatoon, from the 1860s to the 1970s.
Île-à-la-Crosse students were denied the Indian Residential School settlements that others received, on the basis that the school was run by the Roman Catholic Church with no federal funding.
One of the lawsuits discussed in court on Wednesday is over 17 years old. The other lawsuit was filed in 2022 and is looking to have the older suit stayed and its plaintiffs brought into the latest suit's fold.
Neither has been certified as a class action yet.