A call for care: Not enough families to care for kids with complex needs - Action News
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A call for care: Not enough families to care for kids with complex needs

A non-profit organization that helps find homes for youth with complex needs in Newfoundland and Labrador says there are too many kids, and not enough families to care for them.

Heather Modlin says dozens of kids need places to stay

Heather Modlin says dozens of kids with complex needs are having trouble finding places to live. (CBC)

A non-profit organization that helps find homes for youth with complex needs in Newfoundland and Labrador says there are too many kids, and not enough families to care for them.

According to Heather Modlin, director of Key Assets NL, there are more resources now thanin previous years, but there are still dozens of kids looking for homes.

"The common factor among all of them is that they require very special care with people who have an understanding of their previous experiences,"ModlintoldCBC Radio'sSt. John's Morning Show.

She said the youth range in age from infantsto 20-year-olds, and the vast majority of them about 80 or 90 per cent live in the St. John's area.

Key Assets is specifically geared towards young people with complex needs. Modlin saidmost of those needs stemfrom some sort of trauma, like abuse or fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

Youth require full-time attention

According to Modlin, caring for these young people requires full-time attention.

It's not the kind of work that you meet your quota and then it ends.- Heather Modlin

But she added the organization is able to provide significant ongoing support both financial and educational.

"The [caretakers]are not doinganything in isolation there is considerable support around them all the time," she said.

"We provide generous compensation, and that is to pay for needs of children, to compensate the people for the time they are investing."

In the meantime, children who are still waiting to be placed live in residential care in staffed homes.

"Sadly, it's not the kind of work that you meet your quota and then it ends," she said.

"Situations continue to arise, families continue to struggle and children continue to need assistance."

Key Assets is holding a public information session onSept. 29for families interested in learning more about how they can take in kids.

With files from the St. John's Morning show