Close X
Thursday, October 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba moves to get children under government care out of hotels

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2014 11:43 AM

    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government is taking steps to reduce the number of children in care housed in hotels.

    Family Services Minister Kerri Irvin-Ross says the province is creating 71 new emergency foster home spots.

    She says it's part of an overhaul of the emergency placement program.

    She also says the province plans to reduce its reliance on contract workers by hiring just over 200 permanent child-care workers over two years.

    The province's goal is to eliminate the use of hotels for children who are taken into care.

    Manitoba has been criticized by its own children's advocate for over a decade for using hotel rooms to house children taken into government care.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects
    Two bodies have been found in a home in the northern Vancouver Island community of Port Alice.

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers
    Biology teacher Marc Carmichael has gone on strike three times over his 20-year career in British Columbia's public-school system and he estimates losses of at least $5,000 per fight.

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict
    Police are investigating a series of Molotov cocktail attacks they believe are related to a gang conflict in Vancouver.

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation
    British Columbia's securities regulator has found that five B.C. residents manipulated the stock price of a company that traded on the TSX Venture Exchange in a scheme that netted about $7 million and left investors holding worthless shares.

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail
    An Ottawa-area business says it's getting abusive emails from people who think it's the same company that Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal ruled discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men.''

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail