National Post

Judge mulls if keeping kids out of hot spots is for the best

Mental health top priority in custody case

- Michelle Mcquigge

An Ontario judge says he’s wrestling with the issue of whether to order a woman and her three children to honour a family custody agreement by returning to Ontario or allow them to remain in Newfoundla­nd to protect the kids from the mental health tolls of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ontario Superior Court Justice Alex Pazaratz describes the still unresolved case as unusual, noting both feuding parents agree on nearly all the facts and differ only in what they feel would be best for their children living through a health crisis.

The judge’s Jan. 25 interim decision says that the case centres on three Hamilton teens who travelled to their mother’s home province of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador for a month-long stretch over Christmas.

The ruling says that while all three children struggled with pandemic-era life in Ontario, where significan­t public health measures have been in place for months to curb surging case counts, they’ve had a far happier experience in Newfoundla­nd where both cases and government measures are much more limited.

The decision says the mother has opted to stay in Newfoundla­nd for the teens’ sake and is requesting permission to remain there until Ontario schools reopen to in-person classes, while their father is demanding their immediate return.

In adjourning the matter until Feb. 12, Pazaratz ordered the parents to find a counsellor for their hardest-hit son and said the mental well-being of the family’s youngest members deserves more time for reflection.

“We can’t just sit back and say that a 13-year-old boy is terrified about COVID without doing something about it,” Pazaratz said in the ruling. “We need to better understand what he’s experienci­ng . ... We need to help him get through this. This isn’t a legal issue. It’s a mental health issue. And it’s not unique to this family. Perhaps in addition to all the masks and hand sanitizers, we need to pay a bit more attention to how children are coping emotionall­y with COVID fatigue.”

Pazaratz said the teens at the centre of the case felt the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic nearly as soon as it shifted into high gear in mid-march.

Their mother, according to the ruling, said all three scrupulous­ly observed public health protocols and followed rules about limiting social interactio­ns and maintainin­g physical distance from others.

both parents agreed their 13-year-old boy, given the alias John in court documents, took matters the hardest. Pazaratz said the boy developed significan­t anxiety about the risks posed by the virus and at one point stopped using the washroom at school to avoid possible exposure.

Pazaratz said the parents’ custody agreement allows the mother to take the teens to Newfoundla­nd for vacations, noting they have a second home and several close relatives living there.

despite much haggling in the months preceding the trip, Pazaratz said both parties agreed to let mother and children travel to Newfoundla­nd for one month — the traditiona­l two-week vacation plus an additional 14 days to allow for self-isolation upon entering the province.

The judge said the world the teens encountere­d upon emerging from quarantine bore little resemblanc­e to the one they’d left behind.

They resumed team sports, found they had the option to join the kind of youth orchestra that had long ago suspended rehearsals back home, and enjoyed unfettered interactio­ns with friends and relatives while observing only basic public health precaution­s such as wearing masks and preserving physical distance in public spaces.

The disparitie­s in COVID-19 case counts in the two provinces remain striking. Ontario logged 3,911 new infections and 116 virus-related deaths combined on Saturday and Sunday, while Newfoundla­nd recorded no new cases at all over the same two-day stretch and had 13 active infections provincewi­de as of Sunday.

Pazaratz said the mother is now seeking permission to remain in Newfoundla­nd, noting the teens aren’t missing any class since schools in their home district are currently taking place remotely and adding she plans to return when the government decides it’s safe for in-person lessons to resume.

The mother, according to Pazaratz, argued all three of their children have repeatedly stated their preference to stay in Newfoundla­nd and said returning home prematurel­y would be distressin­g to all, but especially John.

The judge said the father sees the matter differentl­y arguing that “anxiety is a normal part of life, and the children’s current worry about COVID could be overcome if the parents simply worked together to reassure them. He feels parents have an obligation to co-operate to help their children deal with and resolve their fears — rather than surrender to them.”

Pazaratz acknowledg­ed that this would have been a relatively open-and-shut case in pre-pandemic times, noting courts would not tolerate a parent unilateral­ly extending an absence from home.

but he also acknowledg­ed that while previous case law dictates COVID-19 should not materially change previous court-approved parenting arrangemen­ts, the pandemic and its fallout can’t be ignored.

“Most of the Covid-related case law has focused on physical protection of children, parents and others with respect to exposure to the coronaviru­s,” he wrote.

“As the pandemic has dragged on, however, there has been increasing community recognitio­n of the impact all of this is having on our mental health. And if adults are having trouble coping with life-threatenin­g dangers, just imagine what it’s like for children.”

THIS ISN’T A LEGAL ISSUE. IT’S A MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE.

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