Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Restores Funding For Children With Autism Following Backlash

The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2016 11:35 AM
    TORONTO — Children five and older with autism will no longer be cut off from government-funded intensive therapy, as the Ontario government announced new funding Tuesday, but some parents are not ready to forgive the Liberals for the "misery" they endured.
     
    The Liberal government announced earlier this year that a new Ontario Autism Program would do away with the distinctions between Intensive Behavioural Intervention and Applied Behaviour Analysis and blend them into a service that would tailor the intensity of therapy to a child's individual needs.
     
    But that program was not due to roll out until 2018, and in the meantime the government said it would stop funding IBI for kids over four, giving families of kids removed from the IBI wait list $8,000 to pay for private therapy during the transition.
     
    The backlash from parents was swift and sustained. Hundreds of children had spent two or three years on the IBI wait list, only to be abruptly removed and given an amount of money that would only pay for, at most, a few months of therapy.
     
    Michael Coteau, the new minister for children and youth services, announced Tuesday that those families will be given direct funding — in successive payments of $10,000 — to pay for therapy until their child has a spot in the new program, or if they prefer, ABA funded by the government.
     
     
    The government is also speeding up the transition to the new program, with a goal of implementing it in June 2017.
     
    "With this additional funding we are ensuring service continuity — in other words, there will be no gaps in service," Coteau said. "I believe without a question that these enhancements we're announcing here today respond directly to the legitimate concerns raised by parents and advocates."
     
    He would not say that the controversial initial transition plan was a mistake.
     
    "No, that original plan got us to where we are today," Coteau said. "There were some challenges there, which I acknowledged — the transition period, the support for families — those are the things that people did not like and we've made some changes, invested some more money and resources to make sure the plan is put in place.
     
    Officials estimate the cost of several changes to the program transition will be $200 million, in addition to the $333 million that had already been earmarked for the new Ontario Autism Program.
     
    Kristen Ellison, a single mom to an autistic boy, said she is "cautiously optimistic."
     
    "I really wanted to hear an apology, though," she said. "I really wanted them to say, 'We made a mistake. We didn't get it right. We're going to get it right now, but we're sorry that we put you through this misery.'"
     
    Kids five and older who were already receiving IBI when the changes were announced this spring will continue in treatment, Coteau said. Officials had said those children would be transitioned out of IBI after six months.
     
    Linda Galvao, who has two autistic children, said she isn't ready to forgive and forget.
     
    "I just feel really upset that we even had to go through this to begin with, the amount of stress that it's put on our family," she said. "I'm just saddened by the whole thing. I can't even be excited today."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five Years In Prison For Drunk Driving Crash Which Killed London, Ont. University Student

    Five Years In Prison For Drunk Driving Crash Which Killed London, Ont. University Student
    Jared Dejong had more than twice the legal limit of alcohol in his blood when he was arrested in the October 2015 collision that claimed the life of 18-year-old Andrea Christidis.

    Five Years In Prison For Drunk Driving Crash Which Killed London, Ont. University Student

    Emergency Declared As Receding Flood Waters Reveal Damage In Dawson Creek

    Emergency Declared As Receding Flood Waters Reveal Damage In Dawson Creek
    Dale Bumstead issued the declaration Friday morning, saying it is the next step in the community's recovery from flooding that forced evacuations, destroyed or damaged bridges and washed away the CN rail line.

    Emergency Declared As Receding Flood Waters Reveal Damage In Dawson Creek

    Trudeau Touts Canadian Tech Industry At New Microsoft Centre In Vancouver

    Trudeau Touts Canadian Tech Industry At New Microsoft Centre In Vancouver
      The prime minister took a tour of the Microsoft Canada Excellence Centre at its official opening on Friday morning.

    Trudeau Touts Canadian Tech Industry At New Microsoft Centre In Vancouver

    Police Probe Theft Of Tiger Skin From Historic Victoria Watering Hole

    Police Probe Theft Of Tiger Skin From Historic Victoria Watering Hole
    Police say the tiger pelt that was a traditional fixture at the former Bengal Lounge at Victoria's Fairmont Empress Hotel was stolen this week.

    Police Probe Theft Of Tiger Skin From Historic Victoria Watering Hole

    Self-Stigma Still Barrier In Military Mental Health: Canadian Psychiatrist Col. Rakesh Jetly

    Self-Stigma Still Barrier In Military Mental Health: Canadian Psychiatrist Col. Rakesh Jetly
    CALGARY — The senior psychiatrist with the Canadian Armed Forces says strides have been made in reducing the stigma of mental illness in the military but some soldiers still suffer in silence.

    Self-Stigma Still Barrier In Military Mental Health: Canadian Psychiatrist Col. Rakesh Jetly

    Police Say Stabbing At Calgary Medical Clinic Domestic In Nature, Charges Laid

    Police Say Stabbing At Calgary Medical Clinic Domestic In Nature, Charges Laid
    Officers who arrived at the Perpetual Wellness Chinese Medicine Centre on Thursday afternoon also found two other people with non-life-threatening injuries.

    Police Say Stabbing At Calgary Medical Clinic Domestic In Nature, Charges Laid