Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Watchdog Has 'No Confidence' In B.C. Ministry's Review Of Child Sex Abuse Case

The Canadian Press, 19 Jul, 2015 12:35 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's children's minister has promised a review after social workers violated a court order and allowed a father who had molested his kids unsupervised visits.
     
    Stephanie Cadieux said Thursday her ministry will examine all the policy, practice and human resource concerns raised by a scathing B.C. Supreme Court ruling.
     
    "This family, and the rest of British Columbia, deserve to know the child welfare system is responsive and accountable for the decisions it makes," Cadieux told the legislature as the Opposition New Democrats demanded she apologize.
     
    The province's children and youth representative, Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, said she has "no confidence" in the ministry's ability to investigate itself.
     
    "This is a child welfare ministry that for some time has felt that it doesn't have to answer to independent oversight or to a court," she said in an interview.
     
    "They're not capable of holding each other to account. They do not have the structures to do that."
     
    Turpel-Lafond, who heads the independent body that oversees the child welfare system, said she wants to participate in the review or see a third party hired to do it.
     
    The ministry said it was working with the Public Service Agency to determine what kind of staff conduct review would work best, and details would be announced later.
     
    Justice Paul Walker said in a written decision released Tuesday that the ministry showed "reckless disregard" when it falsely accused a mother of being mentally ill and removed four children from her care in 2009.
     
    Social workers failed to investigate the kids' claims that their father had sexually abused them and knowingly violated a court order banning unsupervised visits, the ruling said.
     
    Turpel-Lafond said the ministry needs to take immediate action against the workers named in the judgment and examine all other child welfare cases on which they worked.
     
    She said the ministry's decision to eliminate the provincial director of child welfare between 2007 and 2011 created a system akin to the "Wild West" and that even now the director has no power over regional bosses.
     
    Social workers employed by the government are not required to register in the B.C. College of Social Workers, meaning they are not regulated by a professional body, Turpel-Lafond said.
     
    Children's Ministry spokesman Sheldon Johnson said all child protection workers must take specialized university courses and get on-the-job training including interviewing kids who may have been sexually abused. He said workers must have the skills required by the college although they don't need to register.
     
    Johnson said the ministry cannot comment on the individuals named in the judgment due to privacy legislation.
     
    The mother's lawyer, Jack Hittrich, has said that a team leader involved in her case, William Strickland, is still employed by the ministry.
     
    In the legislature, NDP Leader John Horgan questioned how many other court orders the ministry had ignored.
     
    "How many other children are being put at risk because the government believes it's above the law?" he said.
     
    Walker concluded in 2012 that the father physically and sexually abused the couple's three eldest children and gave the mother sole guardianship.
     
    In his decision released Tuesday, Walker determined that the father had also molested his youngest child while the couple's kids were in ministry care.
     
    The ministry has not said yet whether it plans to appeal the ruling.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premiers Commit To Commission Recommendations After Meeting With Native Leaders

    Paul Davis spoke at a closing news conference after meeting with the leaders of national aboriginal organizations in Happy Valley-Goose Bay Wednesday.

    Premiers Commit To Commission Recommendations After Meeting With Native Leaders

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway
    The Toronto Wildlife Centre said it had rescued 31 ducks — with at least a dozen more en route — that were slicked with oil by late Tuesday afternoon.

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada
    OTTAWA — The Conservative government is trying to turn bad economic news to its political advantage as the Bank of Canada outlines a gloomy financial forecast for the rest of the year.

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA — Access to British Columbia's legislature was restricted briefly Tuesday due to security concerns resulting from a noisy protest inside the building's public gallery.

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires
    Forests Minister Steve Thomson said Tuesday that humans have caused 375 of the 1,086 wildfires that have been reported since April 1 and those flames have burned 440 square kilometres. 

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge
    VICTORIA — A second-degree-murder charge has been dropped against a police officer involved in a lengthy armed standoff outside a Vancouver-area casino.

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge