A judge has approved a $17-million settlement in a class-action lawsuit involving the Restigouche Hospital Centre.
The lawsuit was launched against the Vitalité Health Network and the province on behalf of former patients at the mental health centre in Campbellton.
It alleged the residents were subjected to abuse, mistreatment and neglect during their time there.
Koskie Minsky LLP, which commenced the legal action in 2019, was initially seeking $500 million in damages.
But the law firm announced in June that a proposed settlement agreement had been reached, which included a $17-million settlement fund.
Darrell Tidd, one of the two lead plaintiffs in the lawsuit, previously said they are extremely pleased with the proposed settlement.
“Avoiding a 15-year court battle, and obtaining real compensation for class members today, is a big win,” Tidd said in an email.
RELATED: Proposed settlement reached in Restigouche Hospital Centre lawsuit
The class action includes all individuals who resided at the centre from Jan. 1, 1954, to Oct. 1, 2021, who were alive as of May 24, 2017, and claimed they were sexually assaulted.
It also includes all individuals who were admitted or resided at the centre from May 24, 2004, to Oct. 1, 2021, and who were alive as of May 24, 2017.
Patients who were physically or sexually assaulted are eligible to receive up to $85,000 through the settlement. Others are eligible to receive between $1,000 and $5,000, depending on the length of their stay.
“The Court has not decided which side is right or that the Defendants have done anything wrong. The proposed settlement is also not an admission of liability or wrongdoing by the Defendants with respect to the allegations found in the lawsuit,” the law firm said previously.
The lawsuit was launched after a scathing report released by New Brunswick’s ombud in 2019 outlined “mistreatment and inadequate care” of patients at the centre.
Charles Murray called on the province to shrink the mandate of the institution and look at closing a number of units in light of chronic understaffing.
“Far from being its intended centre of excellence, the Restigouche Hospital Centre has reverted to an antiquated model of a mental institution operating largely to warehouse New Brunswick residents with serious mental health issues,” said Murray at the time.
An external advisor hired by the province to review the ombud’s report recommended keeping the centre open but accelerating changes needed to improve the facility’s safety and quality of care.