Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Former Senior Civil Servant Guides Children's Ministry Review Of Sex Abuse Case

The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2015 01:22 PM
    VICTORIA — A well-respected former senior civil servant has agreed to lead an independent review into the botched handling of a child welfare case where a mother's warnings ignored and her children were returned to an abusive father.
     
    Minister of Children and Family Development Stephanie Cadieux says Bob Plecas will submit his review to her by Oct. 13, 2015, and the document will be released to the public a week later.
     
    Cadieux says Plecas will work with the Child Welfare League of Canada, which will offer technical expertise and recommend qualified individuals, policy experts and a legal adviser to assist with the final report. 
     
    The minister says the review will not retry the case, which surfaced from a scathing B.C. Supreme Court ruling that said the ministry showed "reckless disregard'' when its social workers falsely accused a mother of being mentally ill and removed four children from her care in 2009.
     
    The judgement found the ministry failed to investigate the youngsters' claims that their father had sexually abused them and knowingly violated a court order banning unsupervised visits.
     
    Cadieux says any supervisory staff linked to the case will be reassigned while the review is underway and a human resources review will only be conducted if Plecas finds significant concerns with their actions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake

    Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake
    Gen. Jonathan Vance, who took over as the country's 19th chief of defence staff on Friday, says the rise of an extremist state in the Middle East is not something that can go unchallenged by the West.

    Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly
    OTTAWA — A federal panel given the job of recommending ways to improve health care across Canada is warning that the country's medicare system is aging badly.

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

    Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

    Winnipeg police say they are at a loss to explain the disappearance of a 57-year-old woman despite an intensive six-day search.

    Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan
    Fire evacuees from La Ronge, one of the largest communities in northern Saskatchewan, are being allowed to go home.

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie
    The Independent Investigations Office says it will be up to Crown counsel to decide if an incident involving a Kamloops, B.C., RCMP officer and a fleeing suspect will result in charges against the Mountie.

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo
    LIKELY, B.C. — It's expected to be at least four days before the only road to several rural properties in the central Interior community of Likely can be reopened to single lane traffic after a significant slide.

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo