Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 11, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A5
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JUNE 2012
I T is very difficult to figure out exactly what
was running through Children's Advocate
Darlene MacDonald's mind when she suggested
money being spent on a public inquiry into
the Phoenix Sinclair tragedy is a waste.
To be clear, just about everyone within the
child welfare system has probably thought at one
time or another the millions of dollars expended
on this judicial inquiry -
a whopping $ 4.7 million
in the current fiscal year
alone - would be better
spent improving services
to children. Thinking that
is one thing; saying it out
loud, especially when
you're the province's top
child welfare official, is a
different matter altogether.
A former chief executive
of Winnipeg Child and
Family Services, MacDonald seems to have lost
touch with the duties of the children's advocate.
She does not represent the child and family services
system, nor is it her job to advocate for social
workers. Recent comments seem to demonstrate,
however, there is some confusion about these
points.
MacDonald told the Free Press last week not
only is she concerned about the money being
spent on the inquiry, but also about how critical
the public and the media have been of the social
workers who handled Phoenix's file. " It's almost
like you're judge and jury right now as opposed
to let( ting) the facts play out," MacDonald said.
" Caregivers do end up, unfortunately, killing
children, and it wasn't the social workers who did
that."
MacDonald may be right, but that is surely not
the point here. Phoenix, 5, who had been in and
out of foster care most of her life, died in 2005
following repeated beatings and abuse after being
returned to her biological mother. The child
welfare system that ultimately had to take responsibility
for returning the child to her mother
took nine months to realize she was missing. Her
mother and stepfather were eventually convicted
of first- degree murder.
The story has continued getting sadder as
various interested and affected parties have
manipulated the inquiry process to try to generate
some cover for misdeeds in the Phoenix
case. First, public- sector unions representing
social workers attempted to have the inquiry
itself quashed because it was too broad in its
mandate. That bid failed, only to see the unions
press for a publication ban to shield the names
of the social workers. Consideration of the motion
for a publication ban has pushed opening
testimony in this case from early July well into
the fall.
In her comments about the excesses of this
inquiry, MacDonald expressed no concerns about
the actions of the unions in repeatedly delaying
testimony. These are actions that, while legally
permissible, have nonetheless contributed to
the frequent delays and, one could surmise, the
overall cost of the inquiry. Her failure to mention
that would suggest she is once again losing sight
of her duties in this matter.
MacDonald should understand the biggest
threat to the child welfare system is not this
inquiry, but rather the public's general disinterest
in child welfare. Social workers are correct
when they complain their work is ignored or
disparaged and the public only takes an interest
when a horrible tragedy has taken place. That
is exactly why this inquiry is needed; to shine a
light on an issue that is too easily dismissed.
In fact, it remains a mystery why social workers
are not supporting the inquiry into Phoenix's
death. Rather than an opportunity to use social
workers as scapegoats, this inquiry will reveal
how much social workers attempt to do with
the scarce resources provided to them. This inquiry
will reveal the suffocating caseloads, the
trauma they suffer from watching parents abuse
their children and the sadness that comes when
they realize the number of those children who
are sentenced to lives of abuse and dysfunction
because that's the only life they know.
Yes, it will also eventually reveal those who
failed in the performance of their duties, or who
allowed the pressures of the job to justify a lack
of humanity. It is the burden public servants,
especially those who make life- and- death decisions,
frequently have to bear. Those are not
reasons to obstruct this inquiry. And it certainly
is not a good reason for the children's advocate to
step outside her sworn duties in a shameful bid to
protect social workers.
MacDonald should also know judicial inquiries
justify their enormous costs by revealing facts
not previously known. This has been the case in
commissions of inquiry into wrongful convictions.
MacDonald cited numerous other reviews
and studies and their recommendations and
concluded the system is, on the whole, much better.
That may be, but there is surely more work to
be done.
As a former executive in the very system the
inquiry will scrutinize, MacDonald should have
known it would appear to be a conflict of interest
for her to take up the cause of the social workers.
She told the Free Press her comments were
personal. As children's advocate, MacDonald
must know she has no right to personal, public
comments; everything she says is a statement
from her office.
If nothing else, MacDonald's comments demonstrate
we have not yet learned all of the important
lessons of the Phoenix Sinclair tragedy. Although
there are many good social workers doing
courageous work, there is still a high propensity
for conflicts of interest, poor judgment and a lack
of accountability.
MacDonald needs to remember she is not a
union steward, a child welfare agency CEO or a
lawyer. She is the last line of defence for vulnerable
children. And with that acknowledgement,
perhaps she could reconsider the value of an
inquiry into Phoenix's death.
dan. lett@ freepress. mb. ca
Children's advocate off base
Comments on Phoenix inquiry show blurry mandate
DAN
LETT
MacDonald should understand the
biggest threat to the child welfare
system is not this inquiry, but rather
the public's general disinterest in child
welfare.
Phoenix Sinclair
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