Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s New Child Watchdog Says Tragic Child Deaths Drive His Quest For Change

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2016 12:50 PM
    VICTORIA — The deaths of three girls and the anguish of a mother who needed help for her schizophrenic daughter are described by British Columbia's new children's watchdog as life changing.
     
    Bernard Richard said those cases also motivate him to improve the lives of vulnerable young people.
     
    "These are three tragic, tragic, horrific deaths," Richard said Wednesday from his home in Cap-Pele, N.B. "They've changed my life most definitely. Those three moved me and us to dig deeper."
     
    Richard, 65, replaces Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, a former Saskatchewan judge who held the post of B.C. children and youth representative for a decade.
     
    He is a former cabinet minister in New Brunswick, holding a variety of portfolios including education and aboriginal affairs.
     
    The three cases he investigated as New Brunswick's youth advocate involved a neglected two-year-old girl who died of a perforated bowel, a 13-year-old aboriginal girl who hanged herself outside a recreation centre and 19-year-old Ashley Smith, who died in a federal prison.
     
    The death of the two-year-old girl in April 2004 saw Richard release Broken Promises, a scathing report on child welfare services.
     
    The girl's mother was found guilty of criminal negligence and sentenced to 27 months in prison. An autopsy found a plastic pencil-shaped toy, nine centimetres long and one centimetre in diameter, caused the perforation.
     
    In 2008, Richard released a report into Smith's death in an Ontario prison after tying a cloth around her neck while under suicide watch. Guards who were ordered not to intervene stood watch outside her cell.
     
    Richard's report examined Smith's jail time in two New Brunswick custody facilities before her move to the Grand Valley Institution for Women at Kitchener, Ont. The report made 25 recommendations focusing on early intervention options for youth and improving mental health and education services for youth in custody.
     
    After writing a report about seven children in New Brunswick with mental health issues, Richard said he often hears the voice of a mother who pleaded for better supports for her daughter with schizophrenia.
     
    "She told me, 'I wish my daughter had cancer instead of schizophrenia. They would spare no expense to cure her cancer,' " he said. "It shook me to the core."
     
    Richard said it's these tragedies and others that drive him to push governments to do more to protect children.
     
    "I want to be optimistic, but when things need to be said I know they need to be said," said Richard. "I took my government to court when they resisted in providing full disclosure on the death of a 27-month-old girl. It was a Liberal government. I was a former Liberal minister."
     
    Richard said he has been working with First Nations leaders in New Brunswick for the past three years to restructure child and family services agencies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Girls Injured In Stabbing At High School In Abbotsford, B.C.: Police

    Two Girls Injured In Stabbing At High School In Abbotsford, B.C.: Police
    A police statement says a suspect is in custody.

    Two Girls Injured In Stabbing At High School In Abbotsford, B.C.: Police

    Canada To Allow 3 Lakh Immigrants Into Country In 2017

    Canada To Allow 3 Lakh Immigrants Into Country In 2017
    The Canadian government has announced that it will allow 3 lakh immigrants into the country in 2017.

    Canada To Allow 3 Lakh Immigrants Into Country In 2017

    Canada-Based Baloch Women Leader Seeks India's Help For Independence

    Canada-Based Baloch Women Leader Seeks India's Help For Independence
    World Baloch Women's Forum (WBWF) President Naela Quadri Baloch on Tuesday sought India's help for the cause of an independent Balochistan, but urged that the issue should not be mixed up with Kashmir.

    Canada-Based Baloch Women Leader Seeks India's Help For Independence

    Saskatchewan NDP Calls For Action After Another Aboriginal Girl Kills Herself

    Saskatchewan NDP Calls For Action After Another Aboriginal Girl Kills Herself
    The NDP Opposition said the 13-year-old took her life on Sunday in La Ronge, a community about 250 kilometres north of Prince Albert.

    Saskatchewan NDP Calls For Action After Another Aboriginal Girl Kills Herself

    Economic Downturn Tied To Increasing Domestic Abuse In Calgary

    CALGARY — Police say domestic violence in Calgary is increasing partially as a result of a severe economic downturn that has cost thousands of jobs in the oil and gas industry.

    Economic Downturn Tied To Increasing Domestic Abuse In Calgary

    New BC Coroners Service Team To Reinvestigate All 2016 Drug Deaths So Far

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's chief coroner has announced the formation of a specialized drug-death investigation team as part of the province's effort to fight an opioid overdose crisis. 

    New BC Coroners Service Team To Reinvestigate All 2016 Drug Deaths So Far