Feds urged to expand Court Challenges Program to cover treaty rights cases
OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s failure to extend its Court Challenges Program to pay for Indigenous cases involving treaty rights doesn’t make sense at a time when reconciliation is supposed to be a priority, legal experts say.
They say the government should expand the program to include funding for cases under Section 35 of the Constitution, which deals with Aboriginal and treaty rights.
Lorena Fontaine, an associate professor of Indigenous studies at the University of Manitoba and a former member of the program’s equality rights panel, said Wednesday she was “floored” when she first learned funding for Section 35 cases had been left out.
“We are in a period of reconciliation,” she said. “We have a government that is supposedly supportive of Aboriginal rights. We have a minister of justice who is Aboriginal. I just thought that given the climate, that there would have been that extra step in implementing the program to support Aboriginal rights cases.”


