Focus on rising costs of Indigenous legal claims as Ottawa preps financial books
OTTAWA — The federal government’s forthcoming annual public accounts will release a trove of numbers that will show how much more Ottawa expects to pay to settle billions of dollars in legal claims made by Indigenous Peoples and their communities.
The contingent liabilities section in last year’s public accounts estimated Ottawa would eventually have to pay out total of nearly $20 billion to cover 70 outstanding comprehensive Indigenous land claims, 528 smaller specific claims and thousands of other cases of litigation, including those related to the legacy of residential schools.
The total is expected to grow again when the newest documents come out — as it has over the past several years.
The gradual climb of the government’s contingent liabilities is raising questions about how the payments could eventually affect the federal bottom line as each claim is settled.


