Quebec youth protection's adoption form no longer lets foster parents pick preferred race for child - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec youth protection's adoption form no longer lets foster parents pick preferred race for child

Quebec's youth protection agency no longer asks parents who want to adopt a child which race they prefer. The change comes after a Montreal lawyer pointed out that the practice is 'unconstitutional.'

Form 'had no other basis' than to exclude children of colour, says Montreal lawyer

A child is walking.
A spokesperson for Quebec's Health Ministry says it recognizes its previous adoption registration form needed to be changed and that the intention was never to discriminate against children on the basis of race or colour. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Quebec's youth protection agency has revised its adoption registration form for parents and no longer allows themto explicitly state thepreferred race for theirchild.

The change cameafter a Montreal lawyerarguedthe practice was unconstitutionaland essentially made it more difficult for Black, brown and Indigenouschildren to find homes.

Dominique Lebrunsaid the form had "no other basis"but to exclude children of colour from social services.

"I think it had no place in the process," Lebrunsaid.

Up until recently, that process includedan application form that asked potential adoptive parents to describe what kind of child they wanted including age range, sex, health status and race.

For race, parents only needed to check a box among several options including white, Black, mixed race, Asian or Indigenous.

In Quebec, there are two ways to adopt a childwho isinyouth protection.

Regular adoption is whena child's biological parents or legal guardians consent to the adoption process.

Mixed bankadoption is whena child is considered at high risk of being abandoned by his parents and is put in foster care as a first step towardadoption.

As far as Lebrun is concerned, asking parents which race they preferis especially problematic for mixed bank adoptions since, until the adoption process is complete, thosefoster families are paid by the Quebec government.

"I just felt very troubled by the fact that people could literally exclude [children of colour] from their applications especially when they are acting on behalf of the state. They are paid to be foster families," she said.

"The state was actually enabling the discrimination to happen through its formal process."

WATCH | Lebrun explains why parents specifying preferred race for child is wrong:

Montreal lawyer explains why Quebec's old adoption registration form was unfair

2 years ago
Duration 1:19
Lawyer Dominique Lebrun explains how Quebec's adoption process made it more difficult for Black, brown and Indigenous children to find foster homes.

In the new, revised form, the check box is gone. Instead, parents are asked the following questions:

  • Would you accept a child from a different cultural or ethnic background than yours?
  • How would you prepare to meet the cultural needs of the child?

The form also asks the parents to list the positives as well as different challenges they think they will encounter if they were entrusted with such a child.

Historically, Black and Indigenous children have beenoverrepresented in the province's youth protection system.

Stephen Hennessy, an educator who works at Montreal's Jewish General Hospital and specializes in child and family mental health, says lots of harm could be caused to children if they areplaced in homes that are not equipped to deal with their cultural realities.

Filtering parents, in that sense, can bea good thing, he says.

"I'd rather you be straight up and tell me 'that's not what I want' than to take on a child and then further abuse or damage happens," Hennessy said.

Intent was never to discriminate, Health Ministry says

Last year, Lebrun presented hermaster's thesis on the topic to the province's youth protection agency, known in French as theDirecteur de la protection de la jeunesse. Ithighlighted the discriminatory effects of this system, such as creating "two distinct waiting lines" for children in need of foster homes, she said.

In a statement to CBC News, the Health Ministry said the head of the youth protection agency was concerned about the conclusions of the thesisand put a team together to look into possible changes to the form.

"The work group concluded that the wordingof certain questions in the registration form could indeed cause an ambiguity," said Marie-Hlne mond, a spokesperson for the ministry.

A man is standing in front of a building.
Stephen Hennessy, who works as an educator at Montreal's Jewish General Hospital and specializes and child and family mental health, says forcing foster parents to care for children from certain backgrounds without being sure that they are willing to adapt to to the cultural needs of those children is not a good idea. (Rowan Kennedy/CBC)

The spokesperson also said that youth protection officials have the best interests of every child at heart regardless of race or ethnicity and there was a logic behind each of the questions on the form.

"The objective was never to discriminate against a child or a family on the basis of race or colour," the spokesperson said.

The office of Quebec's minister of social services, Lionel Carmant, says it is satisfied with the changes to the registration form.

Lebrun, whose thesis sparked the change, says the revised registration isn't perfect but is a step in the right direction. And though she understands it's important to put children with the right parents, the previous way of doing things was unacceptable, she said.

"From the moment you have a practice that is unconstitutional, you are legally obliged to find an alternative," she said.

"I think if there is one state agency that should not commit discrimination against [children of colour], it's probably youth protection."

With files from Rowan Kennedy