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    Home»Top Countries»Canada»No apology included in proposed $30M settlement for Christian Brothers abuse case
    Canada

    No apology included in proposed $30M settlement for Christian Brothers abuse case

    News DeskBy News DeskMay 13, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    No apology included in proposed $30M settlement for Christian Brothers abuse case
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    The Christian Brothers taught Colin Wilson a lot about accountability.

    Sometimes it was the stick. Sometimes it was the strap. Sometimes it was an open hand on a bare buttocks. 

    Truth was paramount for the boys of Vancouver College, but Wilson believes the administration was held to a different standard. 

    He’s part of a class-action lawsuit alleging the school was complicit in a series of secret deals allowing six Christian Brothers to escape abuse and pedophilia allegations at an orphanage in Newfoundland.

    These men were hired to teach Wilson and his friends at a pair of Vancouver-area Catholic schools.

    “They walk around like they’re the moral authority on life, but they let full-grown men abuse children,” Wilson told CBC News in an interview last week.

    Vancouver College, St. Thomas More Collegiate and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver are nearing a $30-million settlement with more than 200 former students who say they were abused between 1976 and 2013.

    But the proposed settlement agreement does not include an apology.

    That falls short of the expectations and demands of several former students who spoke to CBC News, including Colin Wilson.

    “It upsets me that for my entire childhood, I had to go to confession and I had to do my penance for the smallest things. But what was their penance?” Wilson said. “So yeah. I want an apology.”

    Mount Cashel was a Catholic orphanage in St. John’s and has long been at the centre of an abuse scandal linked to the Catholic church. (CBC)

    The schools were run by the Christian Brothers — a lay order of Roman Catholic educators who operated schools and orphanages around the world. 

    They ran the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s, where boys began raising complaints about sexual and physical abuse in December of 1975.

    A public inquiry later revealed a cover-up orchestrated by the Christian Brothers, local police and provincial government officials to send the offending brothers outside Newfoundland without charges. At least six Christian Brothers from Mount Cashel ended up at Vancouver College and St. Thomas More Collegiate in Burnaby, B.C. They were charged in the 1990s in relation to their time at Mount Cashel.

    Not much was known about their tenures in B.C until a class-action lawsuit was launched in 2021, alleging many of the same behaviours continued after the cover-up in 1975.

    A school with a large cross on the front of the building and a person walking in the foreground.
    Vancouver College is a private Catholic school for kids from kindergarten to Grade 12. (Vancouver College)

    Both Vancouver College and St. Thomas More Collegiate have kept the public updated on the progress of the case through pages on their websites.

    “The present day STMC is dedicated to working with — and walking alongside — survivors, taking every step we can to support their journey,” reads a post signed by St. Thomas More Collegiate president Stephen Garland on March 6.

    “Vancouver College remains committed to a trauma-informed reconciliation process, and we believe in truth and restorative justice,” reads a post from Vancouver College on the same day.

    Former VC student Niall Murphy, a member of the class-action lawsuit, said those words mean nothing in the absence of the word “sorry.”

    “When I first entered into this and joined the class, I actually expressed that I didn’t have any interest in money,” Murphy told CBC News in an interview earlier this month. “What I was really looking for was an acknowledgement of the abuse that had happened at the school and some kind of accountability taken by the school, and also just an apology.”

    Murphy waived his right to confidentiality prior to a settlement approval hearing on April 30, where he addressed the courtroom in person.

    He talked about how he was beaten by staff members in front of his classmates, struck with items ranging from rulers to hockey sticks.

    “Why does the archdiocese and the school still refuse to even acknowledge that abuse, let alone take accountability? How does that honour a commitment to the truth? How is this trauma informed, or contributing to restorative justice?” Murphy asked.

    “I have read the proposed settlement offered to the class members litigating against Vancouver College. Ironically, the language in the proposal actually explicitly distances the institutions from any accountability. I don’t think you can have it both ways.”

    School president agrees apology is needed

    In statements to CBC News, the presidents of St. Thomas More Collegiate and Vancouver College said more work will follow the settlement of the lawsuit.

    Both Garland and Weaver said they look forward to working towards reconciliation after the legal matters are put to rest.

    “Should the negotiated settlement be approved, it will serve as the catalyst for the next phase of this work, including the pursuit of a restorative justice process. Central to that process, in my view, must be a public apology delivered in the presence of survivors, their families, and their loved ones,” Garland wrote.

    A red and white sign outside St. Thomas More Collegiate, a Catholic school, is pictured in front of evergreen trees.
    St. Thomas More Collegiate in Burnaby, B.C., on March 9, 2023. (Justine Beaulieu-Poudrier/CBC)

    And while the proposed settlement does not include an admission of liability, Garland said there can be no denying that the abuse happened.

    “As a school community, St. Thomas More Collegiate refuses to remain silent about historical abuses,” Garland said. “We cannot meaningfully support survivors in their healing if we fail to acknowledge the painful truths of our past. To do so would risk repeating those same failures. We must neither ignore nor attempt to sanitize our history; rather, we must commit ourselves to doing better than those who came before us.”

    The settlement approval hearing will recommence on July 6. Ultimately, it will be up to Justice Simon Coval of the Supreme Court of British Columbia to decide what happens with the proposed agreement.

    Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Sign up for our daily headlines newsletter here. Click here to visit our landing page.

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