Foster parents needed in Iqaluit: child and family services - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:56 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Foster parents needed in Iqaluit: child and family services

With more than 100 foster children in the city alone, a representative from the local chapter of child and family services says Iqaluit needs more foster parents.

More than 100 foster children in city alone

Nunavut's child and family services says there are about 45 foster-care homes in Iqaluit, but the city needs more. (CBC)

A group in Iqaluit is calling for more foster parents in the city.

Jessica Shabtai, who works for the local chapter of children and family services, says there are more than 100 children in foster care in the city alone.

A public meeting was held this week in Iqaluit to provide information for people who might want to become foster parents, which Shabtai says are needed.

"We have something in the neighbourhood of 45 foster homes in Iqaluitthat support not only children outside their families, butmany of the homes are actually extended-family members supporting nieces, nephews and grandchildren," Shabtai said.

She says foster parents have to have a criminal record check and are alsoscreened to ensure they have a safe and loving home.

In a 2011 audit of Nunavut's child and family services, it said more of those safety checks needto be done.

The 2013 follow-up audit found safety checks had been done in 60 per cent of non-family foster homes in its sample,compared to only 32 per cent in the 2011 audit. It found 40 per cent of extended-family foster homes had been checked, up from 25 per cent in 2011.

Shabtai says training is provided for people who become foster parents.

She says they can commit for as long as they'd like from one night, to several years,in some cases adopting the foster child permanently.

The 2013 audit saysthe government could still do more to protect vulnerable children and youth.

It says it has made some progress in hiring and training community social service workers to fill vacancies, and is no longer requiring social service workers in some communities to also actas parole officers.

But the report states not enough has been done in areas such as thecollection and sharing of information about at-risk youth.