Toronto Star

LET YOUTH IN CARE HAVE A VOICE

- SANDRO CONTENTA, LAURIE MONSEBRAAT­EN AND JIM RANKIN STAFF REPORTERS

Ontario is set to crack down on a troubled children’s aid sector with ‘groundbrea­king’ legislatio­n that will take aim at systemic racism, raise the age of protection, allow the province to seize control of children’s aid societies and . . .

Sweeping changes to Ontario’s child protection law will give children a say over decisions related to their welfare, allow the government to grab control of children’s aid societies and increase the age of protection from 16 to 18.

“The proposed legislatio­n is going to be groundbrea­king,” Children and Youth Services Minister Michael Coteau told the Star’s Robert Benzie on Wednesday.

“I believe that it’s going to be reflective of what people in Ontario expect in regards to the delivery of child welfare in the province,” he added.

The minister will unveil changes to the Child and Family Services Act today at Toronto’s Covenant House homeless youth shelter. Sources told the Star the proposed legislatio­n will emphasize the rights of children and youth to participat­e in all decisions about practice, policy and legislatio­n that affect them.

The inspiratio­n comes from a coroner’s inquest into the death of 7-year-old Katelynn Sampson, who was killed by her legal guardians in 2008. The inquest jury recommende­d what has come to be called “Katelynn’s Principle,” which states that children must be listened to and respected when decisions are being made about their welfare.

The principle, which was the focus of a private member’s bill introduced earlier this fall by NDP children’s critic Monique Taylor, also ensures that children’s aid societies consider a child’s cultural heritage when investigat­ing families where maltreatme­nt or abuse is suspected.

“As a province, we have arrived at this point because of the young people who spoke out about their lives and the challenges they face under the current child welfare system,” Irwin Elman, Ontario’s advocate for children and youth, said in a statement Wednesday.

Significan­tly, the changes will make the legislatio­n the first in Ontario history to acknowledg­e there is systemic racism in the child welfare sector. It confirms Coteau’s promise in September to require children’s aid societies to collect racebased statistics.

Studies show that children from black and aboriginal families are hugely overrepres­ented in foster homes and group homes.

The amendments are also expected to use language more respectful of First Nations, Métis and Inuit people.

In 2014-15, an average of 15,625 children were in foster or group-home care because of abuse or neglect from parents and thousands more were investigat­ed for possible protection. Ontario’s 47 privately run children’s aid societies received about $1.5 billion in government funding last year.

Youth can decide to leave care at age16, but the legislativ­e changes will raise that threshold to 18. Children’s aid societies have been concerned about 16-year-olds leaving care with few supports to finish school, get jobs or find housing. The age increase brings Ontario in line with other provinces.

The ministry has not said whether the changes will be supported by more funding.

The legislativ­e changes come on the heels of an ongoing Toronto Star investigat­ion, which revealed an unaccounta­ble child protection system and high numbers of youth being physically restrained in group homes.

The changes were also driven by Elman’s office, which held province- wide hearings focused on the experience­s of youth in care, and by a government-funded report that called for a major overhaul to fight “antiblack racism.”

Aseparate report in Maywritten by three government-appointed experts described a muddled system where the government loses track of children taken into care, has no minimum qualificat­ions for group home caregivers and allows a growing number of kids “with complex special needs” to be placed in unlicensed programs.

The legislativ­e changes grant the minister powers to seize control of — or even merge — poorly performing or mismanaged children’s aid societies to better protect youth in care.

A ministry blueprint revealed in September by the Star stated that the minister could also appoint people to a society’s board of directors, including the board’s chair.

The blueprint included new ministry powers to amalgamate children’s aid societies.

That left smaller societies fearing they’ll be force-fed to bigger ones. Religion-based societies, including Toronto’s Catholic Children’s Aid Society and Jewish Family & Child Service, also feared they’ll be made to disappear.

 ??  ?? The Star reported in December 2014 on the disproport­ionately high number of black youth in foster and group homes.
The Star reported in December 2014 on the disproport­ionately high number of black youth in foster and group homes.
 ?? LISA KANNAKKO ?? Changes to Ontario’s child protection law were inspired by an inquest into the death of 7-year-old Katelynn Sampson, killed by her legal guardians.
LISA KANNAKKO Changes to Ontario’s child protection law were inspired by an inquest into the death of 7-year-old Katelynn Sampson, killed by her legal guardians.

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