Parents won’t have social assistance slashed if kids
placed in temporary care
Cutting benefits forced parents
deeper into poverty and made it, according to one tribunal decision, “very
difficult, if not impossible” to get their kids back.
By Sandro ContentaNews
Jim RankinFeature reporter
Jim RankinFeature reporter
Ontario parents on social assistance
will no longer have their benefits slashed when they temporarily lose their
kids to children’s aid societies.
CACHIPORRAZO FOR THE INIQUITIES
Finally the world recognizes...
That the Canadian regimes are scavengers of horror.
Mixtures of dictators who strikes defenseless families
Reputed symbols of horror, misery and persecution.
Den of offenders of the limpid Great White North
That the Canadian regimes are scavengers of horror.
Mixtures of dictators who strikes defenseless families
Reputed symbols of horror, misery and persecution.
Den of offenders of the limpid Great White North
The policy change by the Ministry of
Community and Social Services lets these parents keep their full benefits until
a court decides whether their children will be kept permanently in care. The
benefits will only get reduced if the children are made Crown wards.
The ministry will also reinstate
full benefits to parents whose children are currently in temporary care,
according to a ministry “fact sheet” obtained by the Star. The ministry says
the change takes effect April 1 and parents on Ontario Works or disability
benefits will be notified by May 1.
“In recognition that decisions on
permanency may take up to two years or longer, during that time full assistance
is to be provided to support the child’s possible return” to his or her
parents, the ministry document says.
The change rectifies what parents,
children’s aid societies and Ontario’s Social Benefits Tribunal considered a
perverse policy. Slashing benefits forced parents deeper into poverty and made
it, according to one tribunal decision, “very difficult, if not impossible” to
get their kids back.
The change comes after the Star
highlighted the gap in a story last fall, part of an ongoing investigation
into the province’s child protection system.
“We’re delighted the change has been
made,” said Caroline Newton, spokeswoman for the Ontario Association of
Children’s Aid Societies, which represents all but four of Ontario’s 47
societies. “It helps us reunite families.
“It takes a huge stress away from
parents, who are extremely fearful that involvement with children’s aid is
going to penalize them economically,” said Newton, who described the practice
of slashing benefits as a kind of “punishment.”
Michael Coteau, Ontario’s minister
of children and youth, applauded community and social services minister Helena
Jaczek for making the change.
“It’s about fairness,” Coteau said
in an interview. “I want to make sure at the end of the day that children are
in homes where they are loved and the system doesn’t create outcomes that make
it harder for families to get back together.”
Almost all children who enter care
do so on a temporary basis. The goal is to reunite them with their families
once parents have been helped with mental health, parenting, addiction or other
issues. Children’s aid officials say it becomes far more difficult for parents
to improve their lives when their social assistance cheques are sharply
reduced.
The biggest concern is housing. The
Social Benefits Tribunal has dealt with at least one case of a parent evicted
and forced to move to a smaller apartment after she lost the housing allowance
Ontario Works provided for her children. Children’s aid won’t return children
to their parents if apartments aren’t a suitable size.
A single mother with three children
would lose $353 a month in housing benefits alone if her children are taken
into care. A Scarborough mother interviewed by the Star was evicted from her
apartment after her benefits were reduced. Her legal battle to regain her three
children has dragged on for three years.
“She was being punished for being
caught up in the system,” said the mother’s lawyer, Anum Malik, referring to
how her client’s case has dragged on in the courts.
“We’re genuinely pleased that the
ministry has made these changes,” Malik added in an interview Monday.
When the Star first reported on the
problem last fall, the social services ministry told the Star it would not
change its policy, even though the Social Benefits Tribunal had overturned such
benefit cuts three times in the last three years. The ministry had no idea how
many parents annually get their assistance slashed due to kids being
temporarily placed in foster or group homes.
On average, 15,625 Ontario children
were in foster or group-home care in 2014-15. A recent study found that parents
who ran out of money for food, housing or utilities were twice as likely to
have their children apprehended.
The policy change was announced in a
March 21 “fact sheet” sent to children’s aid societies.
“In efforts to support family
reunification, a child who is placed in the temporary care of a society must be
maintained as a dependent in the parent’s benefit unit pending a decision of
permanency for the child,” the ministry document says.
After all the pain that we feel… after
all that wounds that never heal… After all those years’ and tear’s that we cry…
do you think CHILDREN’S AIDS you’ll find a place to hide…
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