Calgary Herald

All-party child interventi­on panel focuses on next step

- CLARE CLANCY cclancy@postmedia.com twitter.com/clareclanc­y

EDMONTON The all-party panel tasked with improving Alberta’s child interventi­on system approved its final draft of recommenda­tions Wednesday, aiming to forge better relationsh­ips with Indigenous communitie­s and update legislatio­n.

The ministeria­l panel — mandated to identify systemic problems in child interventi­on services — was set up after the death of Serenity, a four-year-old Indigenous girl who died in 2014. She was covered in bruises and severely malnourish­ed when she was taken to an Edmonton hospital with a head injury. She died a few days after being taken off life support.

Wednesday’s discussion focused on the panel’s second phase of work, guided by themes such as reconcilia­tion, combating discrimina­tory mindsets, and family systems and kinship.

The 26 recommenda­tions ranged from updating policies for family assessment­s to the provincial government supporting Indigenous-led research.

“I would like to take one more step and see actually measurable, timebased recommenda­tions,” said Alberta Party interim leader and panel member Greg Clark. “The concern is we don’t want another report that just sits on a shelf.”

The panel was struck more than a year ago and completed its first phase of work in April. The first set of draft recommenda­tions included increasing the authority of Alberta’s child and youth advocate, timely completion of reviews and better informatio­n sharing.

But Clark said the panel couldn’t reach consensus on publicatio­n bans, which prohibit disclosing the names of children in care. It did recommend a full review of the Child, Youth and Family Enhancemen­t Act, which governs those rules.

He said there needs to be more discussion on balancing transparen­cy with protecting the informatio­n of vulnerable families.

“That’s a piece that was just never discussed in a meaningful way,” he said. “It was the one recommenda­tion we couldn’t come to agreement on at the end of phase one.”

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