Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - March 16, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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TOP NEWS
A3 SATURDAY MARCH 16, 2024 ● ASSOCIATE EDITOR, NEWS: STACEY THIDRICKSON 204-697-7292 ● CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
Child welfare system in peril:
Advocates, First Nations agree with police chief
W
INNIPEG’S police chief has re-
ceived support — from unlike-
ly sources — for sounding the
alarm about street violence committed
by young wards of the province.
Winnipeg Police Service Chief
Danny Smyth’s Thursday news con-
ference calling out the failures of the
system meant to protect youth in care
was “shocking,” but the jolt Manitobans
needed to hear, said Jamie Pfau, presi-
dent of the Manitoba Foster Parents
Association.
“To be honest, I’m happy that Chief
Smyth said this and is shining a light on
it,” she said.
Smyth called the recent spate of vio-
lence “remarkable,” with youths “indis-
criminately” wielding machetes. There
were four random attacks last week, in-
cluding a machete assault on a woman
waiting at a bus stop. A 13-year-old was
arrested Wednesday with a machete
in his possession, police said. The teen
was also linked to a robbery at gunpoint
earlier in the week.
The police chief said all of the sus-
pects were living in group or foster
homes, where caregivers don’t have the
means to give them a stable life.
The Manitoba Advocate for Children
and Youth was “not particularly sur-
prised” by the incidents involving ma-
chete-wielding youths. “We hear about
situations like these time and again,”
Sherry Gott said in an email Friday.
“What we need is investment in resour-
ces and supports for foster families and
group homes who care for our most vul-
nerable children and youth.
While youth need to take responsibil-
ity for their actions, their crimes need
to be seen as a result of a larger system-
ic failure, Gott said.
“While we cannot comment on the
realities for these specific youth, what
we often see with children involved
in the child-welfare system are the
impacts of unstable upbringings, un-
treated trauma, frequent placement
changes and a general lack of adequate
supports.”
Gott stressed there needs to be pre-
ventative measures to help youth cope
with the impacts of trauma and resour-
ces that provide structure for their day-
to-day lives, including mental health
supports and strategies to keep them in
school.
The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs
— that called for Smyth’s resignation
in 2022 for refusing to search the Prai-
rie Green Landfill outside Winnipeg
where the bodies of missing Indigenous
women are believed to be buried — ac-
knowledged Friday an increase in vio-
lence involving youth in care.
“The existing system is plagued by
a chronic lack of resources and sup-
port for caregivers, leaving vulnerable
youth without the stability and guid-
ance necessary for healthy develop-
ment,” the AMC and the First Nations
Family Advocate Office said in a joint
news release. “This neglect often traps
them in a cycle of justice system in-
volvement, leading to homelessness and
substance abuse.”
A youth advisory group of First Na-
tions young people who’ve experienced
both the child welfare and justice sys-
tem is being established to get a deeper
insight into the connection between the
two. Its findings will help shape recom-
mendations for systemic change that
includes decolonizing the child-welfare
system, the release said.
Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine,
who was in New York at the United Na-
tions this week, was not available for
an interview to respond to Smyth’s con-
cerns.
In a statement late Friday, the min-
ister said youth coming into conflict
with the law “speaks to larger societal
issues and a lack of action on address-
ing the root causes of crime.” It said the
NDP government is working toward
decolonizing the child-welfare system
and taking a “whole-of-government
approach” to keep children out of the
justice system. The statement did not
commit to increased funding.
“Everybody involved in the child-wel-
fare system is struggling and is not sup-
ported,” said Pfau, who noted Manitoba
has the lowest basic maintenance rate
for kids in care in Canada and ranks far
behind neighbouring Saskatchewan.
Specific funding for recreation — to
play a sport, learn an instrument or lan-
guage, participate in a chess club, for in-
stance — was pulled back in 2019 when
the province moved to block funding for
child welfare agencies, said Pfau. Fos-
ter families also lost respite care.
“Now we’re seeing the results of be-
ing, first of all, unsupported and then
having what little support we have
pulled back even more and then going
through a global pandemic. These chil-
dren are traumatized and there’s no
supports in place.”
Pfau, who’s fostered as many as four
youth at a time, said one of their foster
children waited a year to be approved
and for an appointment to see a psych-
ologist. She and her husband offered to
pay out of pocket to get an appointment
sooner but were told they could not.
While other provinces and territories
mandate foster parents to participate in
pre-service training prior to being able
to obtain their foster parent licence,
Manitoba does not, Pfau said.
“When we became foster parents, I
was 27 and my husband was 24. We had
no training, no experience, no under-
standing of the history… and we had
two boys placed in our home with ex-
tensive needs. Everyone was set up to
fail.”
New foster parents need to under-
stand attachment and development
theories, trauma and the history and ef-
fects of colonization, said Pfau, who has
a master’s degree in social work and is
working on a doctorate.
“It is something many agencies have
been calling for, but the province has
not committed to anything.”
carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca
CAROL SANDERS
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS FILES
Jamie Pfau, president of the Manitoba Foster Parents Association, said she is happy WPS Chief Danny Smyth has shined a light on issues concerning youth in care.
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
On Thursday police Chief Danny Smyth called the recent spate of violence remarkable.
Smyth supported for
calling out failures to
protect youth in care
;