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Wynne government backtracks on controversial autism funding change

The Ontario government has backed away from a controversial age limit it imposed earlier this year on funding for intensive therapy for children with autism.

'It is a complete sea change for the autism program,' advocate says

As parents look on, Michael Coteau, minister of Children and Youth Services, announced Tuesday morning that the province is providing more support for children and youth with autism. (Mike Crawley/CBC)

The Ontario government has backed away from a controversial age limit it imposed earlier this year on funding for intensive therapy for children with autism, and has introduced a new program for therapy funding in the province.

Minister of Children and Youth Services Michael Coteaumadethe announcement shortly after 9:30 a.m. ET Tuesday in Toronto.

In March, the province announced $333 millionin funding for autism programs over five years, butalso eliminated government-funded intensive therapy forchildren aged five years and older.

The move was widely criticized by affected familiesand advocates, and the ministry said in a media release Tuesday that it "haslistenedclosely to experts, stakeholders, service providers and families" since then.

The government'snew autism plan adds another $200 million over four years to speed up program delivery andprovide $1,000 per weekfor therapy for children five years old and upwhile they're on thewait list.

The transition to the new program will begin in June 2017 instead of 2018, the ministry said.

"The new program will provide all children, regardless of age, with more flexible services at a level of intensity that meets each child's individual needs, significantly reduce wait times for service, and increase the number of treatment spaces available to serve more children and accommodate the rising prevalence in autism diagnoses," the province said.

Additional supports announced Tuesday include:

  • A choice of direct funding orimmediate and continuous access to applied behaviour analysis (ABA) services and supportsfor children five and over who wereon the intensive behavioural intervention (IBI) waitlist, toprovide access to continuous service until children are able to enter the new program next year.
  • Strengthened autism supports in schools to help children transition to and continue in full-time school.
  • Increased access to diagnostic assessments to allow for earlier diagnosis and treatment.
  • Greater access to information and direct supports for families to help themtransition to the new program.

'It was a real shock'

Ottawa residentHeatherBourdon'sson Jacob was nearly a month away from turning five when the March announcement to cut fundingwas made.

"I think it was a real shock to some people because they put all their hope in their children being in this program," Bourdon said."For families,it was just a huge blow for their children's upbringing and ability to participate in society."

Bourdon said families with less financial resources were hiteven harder than her own because intensive therapy costs thousands of dollars every month.Two months of therapy for Jacob,from May 1 to June 30, cost$11,500.

The cut-off sparked months of protests, letter-writing campaigns and social media advocacy by parents as well asadvocates, includingBruce McIntosh,president of the Ontario Autism Coalition.

"We had parents from Windsor to Ottawa, and we had them from Sudbury to Niagara.You name a town or city and they were there," McIntosh said.

Parents of children with autism rallied at the Ontario Legislature on Monday to demand that the province reverse a decision to stop funding treatment for children age five and older at the intensity they require. (CBC)

'It's going to take care of all of them'

McIntosh hadseen the ministry's announcement before Tuesday morning and said he was excited about what it means for the province.

"It is a complete seachange for the autism program from what was announced in March and what was going on beforehand,"McIntosh said. "They have stepped forward in a major way and it's going to meet the needs of every kid touched by autism in Ontario. Whether they've been on the waitlist, whether they've been in the [Intensive Behavioural Intervention]program, it's going to take care of all of them."

The Ministry of Children and Youth Services said Tuesday's announcement was the result of work with advocacygroups such as the Ontario Autism Coalition, families and therapists.

Premier Kathleen Wynne hadsignalledher government might change its position on the autism policyand recently replaced the minister responsible for the change, Tracy MacCharles, with Coteau.

Ottawa resident Heather Bourdon, whose son Jacob has autism, went to Queen's Park to fight against the Liberal government's decision to cut off funding for intensive therapy to children older than five.

Committee will help guide transition

"What the parents are looking for more than anything is a clear statement that if their kid is over the age of five and has a severe diagnosis, that they're not going to get thrown under the bus, that they will get intensive intervention," said Anne Jovanovic, who speaks for the Alliance Against the Ontario Autism Program.

Stakeholders saidthe province wouldannounce a "direct funding" model togive parents more choice over where childrenreceiveservices.That would involve a clinician and the family determining the appropriate level of intervention for each child,and a funding envelop from the province that would be used towards that treatment.

Jovanovic said advocates hadbeen calling for a direct fundingsystem for children with autism.

The Ontario Autism Coalition says it will be participating in a 12-member implementation committee to guide the transition under the new policy.