Foster children placed in hotels for weeks - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:57 PM | Calgary | -6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Foster children placed in hotels for weeks

The Department of Social Developmment placed children and youths in hotels in 13 cases between 2012 and 2014, CBC News has learned.

Foster children aged 11 to 19 placed in hotels in 'emergency placements due to unsafe behaviours'

The provincial government has put youthas young as 11 years old into hotels, sometimes for weeks at a time, for what the Department of Social Development calls "emergency placements,CBC News has learned.

Norm Boss, the province's child and youth advocate, says an emergency hotel placement in his view is 24 to 48 hours in duration, not weeks. (CBC)
In 13 cases between November 2012 and November 2014, children aged 11 to 19 were checked into hotels in Fredericton and Sussex.

The majority of the moves were emergency placement due to unsafe behaviours, according to a summary of the incidents obtained by CBC News under the Right to Information Act.

To me, an emergency basis is 24 to48 hours, said Norm Boss, the province's child and youth advocate,in a recent interview with CBC News.

The longest time a foster child was in a hotel room according to the summary, was over the 2012 holiday season.

The child was checked in from Dec.21, 2012, to Jan.31, 2013.

The department disclosed the costs of food and lodging: $9,197, however it would not provide the name of the accommodations.

Other stays ranged between a few hours in length, to one month.

Bill Innes, the director of child and youth services with the department, told CBC News, that emergency placements in hotels are done when no other safe option can be found.

Bill Innes, an official with the Department of Social Development, says children are placed in hotels in emergency situations, with supervision. (CBC)
Unfortunately hotels are used Individuals who go there often are in situation where, as an example, they could be a risk to themselves or a risk to others," he said.

The provincial governments own emergency home policy, which applies to foster homes and does not have specifications for hotel placements, stipulates emergency placements should be for a maximum of sevendays.

Supervision questioned

The department told CBC News in an email that it contracts out supervision for kids in hotel rooms to agencies with family support workers or human service counsellors.

Tina Fontaine, 15, was reported missing on Aug. 9. Her body was found in the Red River in Winnipeg on Aug. 17. (Family photo)
The department did not answer questions on how the supervision works, what companies are contracted, how the workers are checked for criminal backgrounds or verified by the department to be fit to watch over the children or youths.

I've been advised that this is contracted out. And the contract goes to people who are certified care workers, said Boss.

I'm not 100 per cent comfortable with that, by the way. What did you do to hire that company to provide the care? Are their background checks good? You've got another element of potential disaster, quite frankly, he said.

Manitoba recently moved to overhaul its placement of wards of the province in hotels.

Tina Fontaine, 15,was in the care of that province the day she left her hotel placement and was later found murdered.

Manitoba has now moved to overhaul its system, creating dozens of new emergency foster home spaces.

The province is also in the process of hiring 200 highly-trained, permanent child-care workers, announced as a part of the overhaul in November.

Tammy Aime, a specialized foster parent living in Winnipeg, said she has had youth come into her home after staying in hotels.

She said she gets the impression that there's not much for them except to watch television and sit around.

She was concerned with the age and state in which New Brunswick foster children were placed in hotels.

Tammy Aime is a specialized foster mother in Manitoba. She is critical of hotel placements for youths in foster care. (CBC)
Eleven years of age? I can tell you the longer that child sits in a hotel, the greater those behaviours are going to become, she said.

CharlesEmmrysis a clinical child psychologist practising inMonctonand the founding director of the New Brunswick Youth Treatment Centre.

He said he is concerned about a child with unsafe behaviours being checked into a hoteland critical of the system that landed them there.

The system did not support the foster parent sufficiently to be able to head off the crisis when it began, he said.

So these crises have been allowed to essentially escalate to the point where nobody can keep the child and where the social worker is backed up into the position of having to go to a hotel. And trust me the quality of life that kids have in these hotels is very, very low.

Bosssays the incidence could indicate systemic problems.

[I]f the system isn't broken, we're darn near broken.- NormBoss, child and youth advocate

That tells me that, if the system isnt broken, were darn near broken. Because, why would we need a hotel room for a young person to be placed, so that we can find you a home for the next day or the day after?, saidBoss

My question to government would be,OK, how are we using these? It better be last resort, he said.

The provincial government qualifies the stays as rareand only as emergency situations.

Emmrys saidit shows the system needs an overhaul in New Brunswick. He has presented discussion papers on the topic to government and judges in the province.

In the system that we champion, were recommending, the foster parent has daily contact with a clinician, where you are actually working through the issues the child has on a daily basis, where those foster parents are sitting down as a group on a weekly basis or a bi-weekly basis, to talk about how theyre managing their children and how theyre managing their professional work as foster parents. He said.

Emmrysadded that the system, what he calls wraparound foster care or multidimensional treatment foster care, would save the provincial governmentmoney.

He said the provincial government has been exposed to some innovative ideas but is slow to introduce change.

If you have information about this story, or any other, please email:nbinvestigates@cbc.ca