Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Metis Teen Who Died In Care Abandoned By B.C.’s Child-Welfare System: Watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2017 10:55 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's incoming children's watchdog says an 18-year-old Metis teen in government care was abandoned by the system and took his own life as an act of desperation.
     
    Bernard Richard, the acting children's representative, says in his report that B.C.'s child welfare system failed to find the teen a permanent home with a family and let him drift through 17 care placements over 11 years.
     
     
    The young man had been placed alone in an Abbotsford, B.C., hotel and leapt through his room's window in September 2015.
     
    Richard's report says the death is heartbreaking because the teen was looking for what every child needs, a permanent home and lasting family connections.
     
     
    The report says the Ministry Of Children and Family Development did not take opportunities to place the teen with his stepmother in B.C. or an aunt in Quebec.
     
    Bernard says the ministry instead opted for care arrangements with strangers that ended with his 49-day stay in the hotel with a mostly absent caregiver.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused 'Lone Wolf' Attackers Unlikely To Face Terror Charges In Canada: Experts

    Accused 'Lone Wolf' Attackers Unlikely To Face Terror Charges In Canada: Experts
    Politicians were quick to denounce Sunday's shooting, which killed six Muslim worshippers and injured 19 others, as a terrorist act. But while the label sends a political message, experts said that doesn't always carry over into courtroom. 

    Accused 'Lone Wolf' Attackers Unlikely To Face Terror Charges In Canada: Experts

    How To Kill And Dismember: Jury Hears Of Disturbing Downloads At Murder Trial

    CALGARY — A police cyber-detective says there were downloads on killing and how to dispose of a human body found on a hard drive hidden at the home of a triple-murder suspect.

    How To Kill And Dismember: Jury Hears Of Disturbing Downloads At Murder Trial

    B.C. Construction School Reverses Policy Banning Israeli Students

    B.C. Construction School Reverses Policy Banning Israeli Students
    GABRIOLA ISLAND, B.C. — A private school that teaches log home and wood fame construction has apologized to a man whose application was rejected because he is from Israel.

    B.C. Construction School Reverses Policy Banning Israeli Students

    Indian-American Lawmakers Slam Trump's Immigration Order

    Indian-American lawmakers slammed US President Donald Trump's executive order on immigration at an Asian American and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) Victory Fund conference here.

    Indian-American Lawmakers Slam Trump's Immigration Order

    Tories Criticize Trudeau Over Letter To Fox, Say The Pm Has Better Things To Do

    OTTAWA — The Opposition Conservatives are criticizing the Prime Minister's Office for complaining to Fox News about a tweet identifying the suspect in the Quebec City mosque shooting as "Moroccan."

    Tories Criticize Trudeau Over Letter To Fox, Say The Pm Has Better Things To Do

    Blood-Spattered Quebec Mosque Opens Doors After Weekend Shooting

    Blood-Spattered Quebec Mosque Opens Doors After Weekend Shooting
    Members of the city's Muslim community walked over thick, crusts of blood dried into the carpet of their mosque on Wednesday as they returned to the scene of last weekend's carnage where six men were shot to death.

    Blood-Spattered Quebec Mosque Opens Doors After Weekend Shooting