Manitoba

Stefanson apologizes for abuse at Manitoba Developmental Centre as part of $17M settlement

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson has issued a formal apology in the legislature to former residents of a facility for people with intellectual disabilities.

Portage la Prairie facility for people with intellectual disabilities slated to close in 2024

Black-and-white photo of a dormitory with beds on either side.
A dormitory is filled with beds and cribs in this undated photograph of the Manitoba Developmental Centre. (Archives of Manitoba)

Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson formally apologized in the legislature Thursday to former residents of the Manitoba Developmental Centre, one of the country's last large institutional facilities for people with intellectual disabilities.

Stefanson's apology, part of a $17-million class-action settlement earlier this year, focused partly on abuse and neglect suffered by former residents. But it also touched on the larger issue of housing people in large institutions instead of in the community with personal supports.

"We are sorry for our province's history of forcing children and adults into an institutional model of care, for the resulting loss of family, culture and the right to be (a) valued member of a community," Stefanson told the chamber.

"Our vulnerable citizens were separated and segregated from their families, devalued and denied of their fundamental human rights to live freely in the community."

The facility opened in Portage la Prairie in 1890. At its peak in the 1970s, it housed some 1,200 people but is now home to fewer than 130. The Manitoba government stopped accepting new residents at the centre in 1996, except for short-term and court-ordered placements.

In 2021, the Progressive Conservative government announced plans to close the centre by 2024 and have people live closer to loved ones, often in their own homes with support. That plan remains on track, Stefanson said.

The lawsuit was launched in 2018 by David Weremy, who lived at the centre in the 1950s, '60s and '70s. In his statement of claim, Weremy alleged he was often hit with a whip or a wooden board, frequently underfed and punished for trying to run away by being placed in solitary confinement or being forced to sleep naked on the floor.

The statement of claim sought $50 million and alleged staff beat residents, deprived them of food and allowed sexual assaults to occur between residents.

A man in a wheelchair sits in the rotunda of the Manitoba Legislature.
David Weremy, a former resident of the Manitoba Developmental Centre, was in the legislature Thursday for Premier Heather Stefanson's official apology for the abuse and neglect he and other residents suffered over the years at the facility for people with intellectual disabilities. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Weremy was in the legislature gallery Thursday to hear the apology and later told reporters it felt good.

"Don't put people in an institution. Don't lock them up," he said.

Opposition NDP Leader Wab Kinew said his party wins the provincial election scheduled for Oct. 3, it would follow through on the commitment to close the centre.

"I think the apology is a necessary step and it's clear that the era of institutionalization is over and we're now in an era of inclusion," Kinew said.

The class-action settlement agreement, which received court approval last month, will see much of the $17 million used to compensate former residents. Some of the money is slated to build a monument at the Manitoba Developmental Centre's cemetery and to fund projects that help people with disabilities live in the community.

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The Manitoba Developmental Centre, in an undated photo, was known as the Home for Incurables when it opened in 1890 and was later called the Manitoba School, among other names. It was officially renamed the Manitoba Developmental Centre in the 1980s. (Archives of Manitoba)