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OntarioƵapp Child and Youth Ƶapp Minister Michael Couteau says reforms to the Child and Family Ƶapp Act are “overdue.” Photo by Getty Images

Saving our kids: No easy fixes for Ontario's damaged child care system

By 
  • February 18, 2017

This is Part 2 of our two-part series looking at reforms to OntarioƵapp child welfare system. Click here to read part 1.

We’re all born equal, but we’re born into different circumstances. When the circumstances are worse than just unequal, the rest of us are supposed to do something about it. ThatƵapp why we have childrenƵapp aid societies.

“We get involved when thereƵapp a problem. We’re responding to a problem — we’re not creating a problem,” said Catholic ChildrenƵapp Aid Society of Hamilton executive director Rocco Gizzarelli.

But it doesn’t always work.

“It shocks me that a child can go through a system and thereƵapp no one that stops to look down at that kid and say, ‘Hey, wait a minute. What do you need? What are you feeling? What would you like to do?’ I think that needs to change,” Child and Youth Ƶapp Minister Michael Couteau told The Catholic Register. “Because that does happen.”

Couteau is driving the biggest legislative changes in OntarioƵapp child welfare system since the Child and Family Ƶapp Act was first passed in 1990 — a 250-page reform bill that has already been through first reading and will be studied in committee this month. If it passes this spring, by next year the new law will protect older teens up to the age of 18 (from the current 16), will require greater transparency and accountability from childrenƵapp aid societies and will mandate that every decision made about a child in the system be driven by the childƵapp best interest. ItƵapp a change driven by ever-growing evidence of an inadequate system stained by several cases of child deaths.

But itƵapp a law and you can’t legislate love. It takes something more than an agency to raise a child, and there are problems that no single piece of legislation can solve.

The system is complex, with 47 independent childrenƵapp aid societies, each with its own history, board of directors and suite of services. ThereƵapp fear in many agencies that the provinceƵapp next move might be massive centralization and control from QueenƵapp Park.

“We’ll give the minister tools, to have a bigger stick, to force the childrenƵapp aid (societies) to do what we want them to do,” said Ontario Child Advocate Irwin Elman, explaining the logic behind the reform bill. “So thatƵapp why in the bill thereƵapp this idea that the minister can appoint members of the board of every childrenƵapp aid. Is he going to do that? He has the power.”

ItƵapp not just appointing board members. The new act will allow the Minister of Child and Youth Ƶapp to take over boards, to amalgamate societies, to issue compliance orders in particular cases. The reform also opens up the possibility of creating a single, centralized, provincial adoption agency.

Could that mean the few religiously based childrenƵapp aid societies (two Catholic societies in Toronto and Hamilton, plus Jewish Child and Family Service of Greater Toronto) are in trouble?

“I do worry about that,” HamiltonƵapp Bishop Doug Crosby said. “At the same time I have hopes that we will be engaged in the dialogue.”

GraphicChildren2 web(Graphic by Lucy Barco)

“ThereƵapp a critical role of faith in all this that they want to eliminate. You see in the legislation, amalgamation is in there,” said Gizzarelli.

At the beginning of February, CouteauƵapp office told The Catholic Register it was trying to find a date for a face-to-face between Crosby and Coteau.

Coteau knows about the fears, but is convinced that the 47 childrenƵapp aid societies and his ministry are all pulling in the same direction.

“I think thereƵapp a buy-in from the system. I don’t think I have met one person in the system who doesn’t acknowledge that this piece of legislation is overdue and itƵapp going to make major changes,” he said.

“We’re obviously watching and talking about it,” said Catholic Charities executive director Michael Fullan, a member of the board at Catholic ChildrenƵapp Aid Society of Toronto. “The ministry has taken over childrenƵapp aids in the past — going back 10, 15 years ago. ItƵapp happened. ItƵapp rare. They have forced amalgamations already in the province. This is not new.”

If everybodyƵapp nervous, Couteau understands.

“ItƵapp going to be uncomfortable for some folks,” he said. “When you start talking about appointments, the minister having the right to appoint, to take over a board, having the ability to just force people into mergers — it makes people uncomfortable.”

But Coteau insists those measures are “just a small piece of the legislation.”

“When we’re talking about children, we should have challenging conversations that do make us uncomfortable, that make us think differently and allow us to put in place what we feel is necessary to protect children,” he said.

Amalgamating Catholic and Jewish agencies out of existence isn’t on CoteauƵapp to-do list.

“I’ve been on the record many times saying that I believe there is value in having a Catholic system, thereƵapp value in having a Jewish system,” Coteau told The Catholic Register. “Especially considering that in the (new) legislation you will notice thereƵapp a centrepiece around indigenous and black youth and building culturally relevant programs or initiatives within the larger systems…. We can learn from what the experiences have been like in the Jewish and Catholic boards, because they’ve been doing this for years. I think thereƵapp actually benefits to us adopting processes, ideas and thoughts from other systems outside of the general, public system itself.”

When it comes to the make-up of society boards, CouteauƵapp worry is that they don’t necessarily reflect the people they serve. ThereƵapp an awful lot of black families involved in the system and not very many black people on childrenƵapp aid society boards.

The societies have not collected race-based data in the past and the new legislation will require it. But one look at the group home and foster care population in Toronto found 41 per cent of the kids were black.

“I don’t want to get into the business of just picking random names and appointing people to a board,” Couteau said. “But what I think is necessary is, for example, making sure that that board is reflective of the clients it takes in — to make sure that that board has the voices of cultures, like indigenous voices.”

“In terms of diversity, we’re working on that,” said Toronto Catholic ChildrenƵapp Aid executive director Janice Robinson. “It is a requirement for all board members to be Catholic.”

RobinsonƵapp preference would be to see childrenƵapp aid societies solve board diversity problems on their own. Once board members start getting appointed at QueenƵapp Park it could threaten the “Ontario model,” which holds up community boards as the best way to ensure the societies are responsive to their local community.

saving kids1 webReforms to the Child and Family Ƶapp Act are “overdue,” says OntarioƵapp Child and Youth Ƶapp Minister Michael Couteau. Among other changes, his reform bill will mean protection for children to the age of 18 instead of the current 16 years of age. (Photo by Michael Swan)

“The relations CASs have with their communities is very much treasured. It varies across Ontario,” she said.

In the academic literature, involvement in child welfare is associated with homeless, long-term poverty, unemployment and education deficits. Domestic violence is a huge issue throughout the system and it gets passed from generation to generation.

“The generational nature of child welfare services is something we want to disrupt. We want to stop it,” said Robinson.

ThereƵapp no magic formula for getting different outcomes, especially when it comes to lifelong poverty, said Gizzarelli.

“The (academic) literature and the child advocate have gone on record saying we produce poor outcomes for kids. But people need to put in context that a lot of these kids come to us already troubled,” said Gizzarelli. “There seems to be this focus on the poor outcomes. ThereƵapp poor outcomes when there is no system either.”

In the chicken-or-egg debate over whether poverty creates the need for childrenƵapp aid or childrenƵapp aid sets up kids for a life of poverty, there are still unanswered questions, Robinson said.

“We are really just beginning to understand that there are social determinants, predictors if you will, of the need for child welfare services,” Robinson said. “The legislation doesn’t tell us the social determinants of how people come to our door. ItƵapp poverty. ItƵapp homelessness. ItƵapp vulnerability for all kinds of other reasons.”

Couteau says his child welfare reform plans are part of his governmentƵapp overarching poverty reduction strategy, which includes a 10-year commitment to end chronic homelessness, increases in minimum wage, access to dental care for 45,000 low-income kids and now free university and college tuition for about 150,000 students whose families make less than $50,000 per year.

While childrenƵapp aid societies have a long history of dealing with the effects of poverty, it is not a problem they were ever set up to solve on their own, said HamiltonƵapp Gizzarelli.

“Poverty is a social issue,” he said. “ItƵapp not just a child welfare issue. ItƵapp a community issue. We have a collective responsibility…. To isolate it just to child welfare, we’re not looking at the problem.”

There are no magic bullets, no sure-fire formulas. Kids are born into poverty, family dysfunction, social isolation, racism and exclusion, patterns of violence, poor housing, no housing, addiction and 100 other things they can’t control. From the Catholic point of view, faith is how people stand up against those odds.

For Robinson, faith is not some abstract philosophy but a practical tool.

“ItƵapp not an old-fashioned idea at all. ItƵapp a very integral part of what makes a person,” Robinson said.

The families who come to Catholic ChildrenƵapp Aid have declared they want Catholic services.

“One of the things I find in the families we work with is that loneliness, social and emotional loneliness, is a big factor,” Robinson said. “Connection to the Church can be a big assist.”

Cultural and religious identity, the practices of prayer and discernment, build “resilience” in all children, not just kids in care, she said.

“In this day and age, we need an anchoring point for kids,” said Gizzarelli. “We do know that bringing faith into peopleƵapp lives produces different kinds of outcomes.”

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