More than 2 months into overtime, Alberta child intervention panel continues without deadline - Action News
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More than 2 months into overtime, Alberta child intervention panel continues without deadline

A specially-formed panel on Alberta's child intervention system could exceed its deadline by half a year, Children's Services Minister Danielle Larivee said Monday.

Latest public panel meeting focused on supports for Indigenous children and families

Minister of Children's Services Danielle Larivee on Monday spoke at a public meeting of the Ministerial Panel on Child Intervention. (Zoe Todd/CBC)

A specially-formed panel on Alberta's child intervention system could exceed its deadline by half a year, says Children's Services Minister Danielle Larivee.

"The panel needs the time to do their work,"Lariveetold reporters at the panel's latest meeting on Monday.

"Hopefully we'll have those recommendations early within the new year."

TheMinisterial Panel on Child Intervention, prompted by the 2014 death of a four-year-old girl named Serenity,first met in February.

After three months of deliberation, members in April agreed on a preliminary round of recommendations, targeting the child-in-care death review process.

A final set of recommendations was expected by Aug.1, but in July the all-party panel extended the deadline indefinitely.

Members asked for more time tomeet with Indigenous communities and leadership on reserves throughout the province, Larivee said.

"The services that are available to children who live on First Nations are so different," she said.

"They don't have access to the same services, the families don't have access to the same supports and that's one of the things the panel has committed to addressing."

Kids pay 'real consequences'

Lariveejoined the panel in Edmonton on Monday for a presentation by Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada.

The national organization advocates for the rightsof Indigenous children, youth and families.

Blackstock urged Lariveeand the province to act quickly once the panel submits its recommendations.

"Don't we owe it to every child in this country to say that you are worth the money?" Blackstock told reportersafter the meeting.

"Our fundamental role as adults is to stand up and speak up for kids."

Monday's panel meeting featured a presentation by Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada. (Zoe Todd/CBC)

TheMinisterial Panel on Child Intervention is the seventh review of children's services in Alberta since 2008.

Recommendations are not legally binding and there are no repercussions for the province if they aren't acted on.

For the sake of the 10,000 children in provincialcare, Blackstocksaid, that can't be allowed to happen.

"There are consequences for those reports ending up on the shelf. And it's not just more taxpayer funding and more reports. The real consequences are paid by those kids," she said.

Blackstock pointed to the death of four-year-old Serenity, an Indigenous girlwho died of head trauma in 2014 while in kinship care.Details of the girl's death prompted theMinisterial Panel on Child Intervention.

Larivee said the province is committed to following the panel's recommendations.

"Every single member of the legislature, no matter where they sit, was struck by that story," Larivee said about Serenity's death.

"I certainly think we were all changed by this and inspired in order to see what we can do to prevent a tragedy like that from happening again."

To document her condition, Serenity's mother took pictures of the four-year-old girl shortly before she died at the Stollery Children's Hospital in 2014. (Supplied)