Waterloo Region Record

‘It hurts my heart’

Social worker pushing for Alex Alerts for at-risk children after teen dies in parents’ care

- Bill Graveland The Canadian Press

CALGARY — A British Columbia social worker says she won’t abandon her fight for a national alert system to prevent at-risk children from disappeari­ng when their families unexpected­ly relocate to different jurisdicti­ons.

“Absolutely I’m frustrated,” said Patricia MacDonald, who has worked for B.C. Children’s Services for more than 20 years, and had asked a judge not to return Alexandru Radita to his family.

Emil and Rodica Radita were found guilty nearly a year ago in Calgary of firstdegre­e murder of the 15-year-old, who weighed just 37 pounds when he died in 2013. The trial heard that the boy, who was covered with bedsores and riddled with infection, died of complicati­ons due to untreated diabetes and starvation.

B.C. social workers took care of Alexandru after an October 2003 hospital admission because his parents refused to treat his disease.

He was placed in foster care, where he thrived for nearly a year before he was returned to his family, which eventually moved to Alberta.

MacDonald has proposed a system of “Alex Alerts” that would notify other provinces when at-risk children move.

In Radita’s case, the court heard B.C. social services had an address for the family in Alberta but didn’t pass it along.

“It hurts my heart that the social worker let him down and didn’t call Calgary because they had an address for them in Calgary apparently,” said MacDonald. “If they had called the Calgary social workers they would have been on it.”

MacDonald said she has contacted a number of provincial and federal agencies, including the office of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, pushing for the alerts.

But she said she has been referred to a 2016 interprovi­ncial child welfare protocol, which sets out the responsibi­lities when families move out of province.

The president of the Alberta College of Social Workers agrees that there needs to be a better way to track at-risk children.

“I think it is a problem. Part of it is because each province has its own legislatio­n so there’s no national legislatio­n to cover these type of situations,” said Richard Gregory.

“I think it’s a fabulous idea. You hear about those cases where a family becomes aware that they’re going to be investigat­ed by children’s services and they take off and move to a different jurisdicti­on and fly under the wire for a while. There’s no way of tracking them.”

An official with the office of Ontario’s Children’s Advocate is also willing to discuss the matter.

“In principle, an Alex Alert is a good idea if a social services agency in one province could send an alert to its counterpar­ts in other provinces of the child’s status or trace of whereabout­s if that informatio­n is known,” said Akihiko Tse.

“We realize however, that in the tragic case in question, the child was never brought to the attention of social services and was not seen or heard by those in other sectors (education, health, etc.).

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