Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Democrats Repeatedly Demand The Resignation Of B.C. Children's Minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2015 12:55 PM
    VICTORIA — The death of an 18-year-old male in government care is a part of a pattern of tragedies plaguing British Columbia's Ministry of Children and Families, say Opposition New Democrats who made repeated calls Monday for the minister to resign. 
     
    Alex Gervais fell from the fourth-floor window of an Abbotsford hotel on Sept. 18, and was one of three deaths and a series of sexual assaults New Democratic Leader John Horgan cited in the legislature before asking Stephanie Cadieux to resign.
     
    Horgan referenced Isabella Wiens, a 21-month-old girl found dead in her foster home crib in March 2013.
     
    He also named Paige, a 19-year-old legally blind aboriginal girl who overdosed on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, a woman who B.C.'s children's representative said was supposed to be protected by social workers.
     
    Horgan's also raised a B.C. Supreme Court ruling by Justice Paul Walker who said in July that the ministry showed "reckless disregard" when it didn't investigate children's claims that their father had sexually abused them, noting the man even molested his youngest daughter while she was in foster care.
     
    The tragedies are part of a "pattern," said Horgan who asked Cadieux how she thought she could still lead the ministry.
     
    "Will she today do the right thing and tender her resignation so that new leadership can be found, new leadership can be found to resolve the issues that have gone wanting on her watch," asked Horgan.
     
    The same request was later made by fellow New Democrats Michelle Mungall and Shane Simpson.
     
    Cadieux ignored questions about her resignation and instead replied that she couldn't speak about specific cases, but was committed to her job and an investigation is under way into the situation concerning Gervais.
     
     
    "The reality is that from time to time we learn about circumstances that don't go according to plan ... and have, in some cases, extremely tragic outcomes," she said. "Then it is my job as minister to ensure that all of the necessary reviews and investigations take place so that we can make adjustments, changes, to ensure that it doesn't happen again."
     
    Doug Donaldson, a NDP member representing Stikine, asked Cadieux how she could let Gervais die alone. 
     
    Cadieux said the Child, Family and Community Service Act doesn't allow her to get involved in the day-to-day decisions made on the ground by ministry employees.
     
    "Nor should, in my mind, the political branch of government be involved in the day-to-day decisions regarding the protection of children and youth, madame speaker," she said. "If the member thinks differently he should say so."
     
    Cadieux said 110 more child-protection workers are now employed compared to this time last year and the number of children in care is at its lowest level in more than 19 years.
     
    She said children in care are more likely than ever to remain with their family or extended family and adoptions have risen by 20 per cent over last year.
     
    Children's representative Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond said last week that she was misled into believing that no children in care were living in hotels and she demanded the ministry assure it doesn't happen again.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Heartbreaking Image Of Alan Kurdi Sparks Major Increase In Canadian Aid Generosity

    Canadians have flooded the United Nations children's agency with an outpouring of cash in the week since the image of a dead Syrian boy on a Turkish beach shocked the world.

    Heartbreaking Image Of Alan Kurdi Sparks Major Increase In Canadian Aid Generosity

    Vancouver Island Mom Of Four Kids Allegedly Abducted Overseas Wants To See Progress In Case

    Vancouver Island Mom Of Four Kids Allegedly Abducted Overseas Wants To See Progress In Case
    Canadians have flooded the United Nations children's agency with an outpouring of cash in the week since the image of a dead Syrian boy on a Turkish beach shocked the world.

    Vancouver Island Mom Of Four Kids Allegedly Abducted Overseas Wants To See Progress In Case

    Straight To Trial For Two Men Charged With Murder In Death Of Toronto Woman Laura Babcock

    Straight To Trial For Two Men Charged With Murder In Death Of Toronto Woman Laura Babcock
    TORONTO — Two men accused of murdering a Hamilton-area man will go straight to trial in the death of a Toronto woman.

    Straight To Trial For Two Men Charged With Murder In Death Of Toronto Woman Laura Babcock

    Big City Mayors Hold Teleconference To Discuss Plans To Aid Syrian Refugees

    Twenty-one mayors including Toronto's John Tory, Calgary's Naheed Nenshi and Montreal's Denis Coderre are members of the caucus.

    Big City Mayors Hold Teleconference To Discuss Plans To Aid Syrian Refugees

    Ontario Pledges $10.5m To Syrian Relief; Seeks To Become Home To 10,000 Refugees

    TORONTO — The Ontario government is pledging $10.5 million to the Syrian refugee crisis, Premier Kathleen Wynne announced Saturday.

    Ontario Pledges $10.5m To Syrian Relief; Seeks To Become Home To 10,000 Refugees

    'Chase The Ace' Event Expected To Attract Thousands To Small Town In Cape Breton

    'Chase The Ace' Event Expected To Attract Thousands To Small Town In Cape Breton
     Thousands of people are expected to travel to a small town in Cape Breton today, where the jackpot for a local fundraiser is expected to hit the $1-million mark.

    'Chase The Ace' Event Expected To Attract Thousands To Small Town In Cape Breton