)FREDERICTON, NB – May 16, 2022 – Press Release) – New Brunswick must act with more urgency to protect children at risk of harm, according to a new report released today by the Office of the Child, Youth and Seniors’ Advocate.
Advocate Kelly Lamrock has released the first of two reports on the province’s child welfare system. Easier To Build is billed as a report and a “call for urgency” when it comes to protecting children at risk. It calls for the adoption of a Children’s Act as a starting point to ensure faster responses, better co-operation between departments and the entrenchment of children’s rights.
“Our inquiry found that, too often, child protection cases linger without resolution and without meeting the urgent duty to protect children from harm,” said Lamrock. “As the title suggests, it is easier to lift children up today than to deal with broken and traumatized young adults later. That is why we are calling for the reforms, the resources and the systemic change that puts the rights of children first. Every child should know stability, safety and equal opportunity from a young age. It is time for a system that makes our duty to children the first and most urgent priority.”
The report finds that, too often, child welfare cases can drag on because of a lack of resources and a mistaken focus on parental rights.
“Ideally, we should not see children waiting until adolescence or until there have been repeated removals from the home before they are given stability,” said Lamrock. “We have dedicated and competent people on the front lines, but they need a legal regime that makes it clear that children cannot wait in limbo, moving from temporary home to temporary home, because their need for stability is put behind other considerations. Our report sets out recommendations that put children and their rights first.”
The report calls for the adoption of a new Children’s Act that would not only govern the child welfare system but provide co-ordination of all services impacting child welfare and provide for enforcement of children’s rights. That should be the start of a process that encompasses the other recommendations, which include:
- Renewing a commitment to integrated service delivery in government, in which departments collaborate automatically on sharing information and providing services to youth at risk. The report calls for the premier to ensure cabinet-level responsibility for integrated service delivery, with a minister and secretariat ultimately responsible for co-ordinating services and responses through a new Children’s Act.
- Improving case planning and co-ordination among the Office of the Attorney-General, the Department of Justice and Public Safety, and the Department of Social Development in putting children’s needs first every time a child comes in contact with the courts.
- Ensuring that the mission of protecting children from abuse, violence and neglect applies not just to violence at home, but also to avoiding educational neglect of children and ensuring their well-being throughout the community.
- Entrenching the rights guaranteed children by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child into law, and setting out a long-term plan for law reform that moves toward enforcement of children’s rights, with effective mechanisms to address violations.
- Undertaking a reform of court procedures and rules that affect children at risk, with the Department of Justice and Public Safety engaging the judiciary and lawyers on a review to address delays, ensure child-friendly court procedures, enhance children’s participation and legal representation, and improve judicial oversight of administrative decisions that affect children’s welfare.
“We can do more to keep children safe and protect them from harm. It is the most important charge any society has,” said Lamrock. “Work has been done, but we still have not reached a point where every department works together to put children’s rights outcomes ahead of rules and procedures. We expect that to change and the urgency of the project to be communicated by government with cabinet-level leadership.”
Easier To Build is the first of two reports coming out of a lengthy review of child welfare services by the advocate’s office. The second report, Through Their Eyes, will examine the day-to-day operations of the system through the lived experience of children in care. The second report will be released within the next three weeks.
About The Author
More Stories
NT minister says deaths of Indigenous woman and baby should have been ‘all over the news’
Northern Territory police minister Kate Worden, who is also the minister for domestic violence, said it had been a ‘heartbreaking week’ after two DV incidents. Photograph: Aaron Bunch/AAP
‘I want to tell you how very sorry I am’: Pope’s Iqaluit speech hews close to earlier apology
Pope Francis attends a community event near Nakasuk Elementary School in Iqaluit on Friday afternoon. In his speech, the Pope asked forgiveness and referred to the ‘indignation and shame’ he felt about Canada’s residential schools. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)
Future of lawsuit over language of instruction in Nunavut schools rests with Nunavut court judge
(By Sarah Krymalowski · CBC News · Iqaluit, NU - August 04, 2022 - Used with Permission) - It's up to a Nunavut judge...
In the North, Indigenous workers outpaced non-Indigenous in CERB uptake by wide margin: Statistics Canada
According to the report, among all workers who earned at least $5,000 in 2019, more Indigenous workers (39.2 per cent) than non-Indigenous workers (33.9 per cent) received CERB payments.
N.W.T. residential school survivors, descendants head to Edmonton for papal visit
“So the evidence is there. You can see the way we are, our behaviours and how we walk through life, the struggles that we had, and the difficulties that we had — difficulties sometimes in learning, difficulties in relating to one another, difficulties in marriage, difficulties with alcohol.”
– Mabel Brown, residential school survivor
‘We can forgive, but we’ll never forget’: residential school survivors in Manitoba travel to papal visit stop
“We can forgive, but we’ll never forget what happened, and the pain, we’ll always carry the pain until the day we die.”
– Linda Daniels , residential schoolsurvivor
Average Rating