Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Is Housing Foster Children In Hotels Due To Spike In Numbers

The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2015 06:45 PM
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government has been housing children in the care of social services in Regina hotels in recent weeks.
     
    Natalie Huber with the Social Services ministry says 55 children were taken into care last month, more than double the average number.
     
    She says hotels are used only under exceptional circumstances and, in this case, there were no spots with foster families, extended relatives or non-profit groups.
     
    As of Friday, there were 13 children living in hotels in the capital city.
     
    The Manitoba government has vowed to put an end to using hotel rooms as emergency placements for children after two teen girls living in them were attacked.
     
    Huber says the case is a bit different in Regina, where most of the children are under 10 and are staying in hotel rooms with support staff.
     
    "We're not seeing adolescents in these situations," she says.
     
    "The care we're providing in these hotels — we're heavily supervising. There's 24-hour staff in the rooms."
     
    Huber says plans were being made for six of the children still in hotels to move out and officials were working to find placements for the others.
     
    She hopes the spike in numbers is an anomaly and they will go down.
     
    "This is not something that we anticipate being long term. We're already in discussions about some ... options to move away from this."
     
    Hotels have been used about six times in the last two years in Regina and North Battleford, she says.
     
    Officials in Manitoba promised last fall to stop using hotels when 15-year-old Tina Fontaine ran away from her downtown Winnipeg hotel. Her body was found days later, wrapped in a bag in the Red River.
     
    In April, another 15-year-old girl in care in a Winnipeg hotel was allegedly attacked by a male teen also being housed at the hotel. She remains in hospital.
     
    Manitoba announced last week that it has virtually eliminated hotel use in Winnipeg, but not in some rural and northern areas.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police
    VANCOUVER — A 60-year-old Vancouver woman who was hit by a pickup truck in a grocery-store parking lot has died of her injuries. Police say the pedestrian was walking along a foot path on Monday afternoon when she was struck.

    60-Year-Old Woman Struck In Vancouver Grocery-Store Parking Lot Dies In Hospital: Police

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry
    VANCOUVER — A second Mountie has been acquitted of perjury stemming from a public inquiry into Robert Dziekanski's death at Vancouver's airport.

    Second Mountie In B.C. Acquitted Of Perjury Stemming From Dziekanski Inquiry

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help
    Fourteen-year-old Abigail Bergman — who acts on the Family Channel's "Next Step" series — and her friend Polinah Ouskova, 15, were reported missing by their families after they didn't return to their Oakville, Ont. homes on Monday night

    14-Year-Old Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Missing In Toronto Area, Police Ask For Public's Help

    Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

    VICTORIA — A delegation of Alaskans is coming to B.C. to voice concerns about the Mount Polley mine disaster and the possibility of a similar environmental catastrophe occurring near their border.

    Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled a B.C. man can use the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to pursue a lawsuit after being wrongly imprisoned for 27 years for sexual assaults he did not commit.

    B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years Can Sue, Supreme Court Says

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture
    PORT MOODY, B.C. — The CEO of a British Columbia non-profit that accidentally distributed toxic mothballs in more than 1,100 food bank hampers says he has no idea how the mishap happened.

    B.C. Food Bank Unsure How Toxic Mothballs Ended Up In Candy Mixture