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2012-02-05 at 11:42

More children forced into foster care as addiction problems continue to grow

By Jamie Smith, tbnewswatch.com
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There are currently 568 Aboriginal children in foster care throughout the district.

Donald Auger says the number of children in care has doubled in the six years since he became executive director of Dilico Anishnabek Family Care, a multi-service agency that also provides child welfare services for the district’s Aboriginal population.

In up to 80 per cent of the cases, the child enters care because of neglect due to drug use by the parent.

“This has gotten to become an epidemic,” Auger says. “Drugs are a huge, huge problem.”

In some cases, 25 per cent of an adult population is addicted to prescription drugs, Auger says.

Auger cautions that the drug problems faced by the Aboriginal community are no different than any other population and that the same problems are happening everywhere.

“There are no boundaries with addiction. Everybody has the same problem.

“This causes a ripple effect on every social service agency in the area.”

For a child to be taken into service, they have to be deemed at risk. Dilico director of child welfare services Susan Verrill says only a quarter of the children served by Dilico end up in care.

“We work with a lot of kids that are deemed in need of protection but they still remain at home.”

The result is that Dilico is growing every year to keep up with service demands.

“What it means for us is that we’re always trying to catch up and have enough staff to provide the service to the children that we need and want to provide to them,” she says.

Physical and sexual abuse only account for around 14 per cent of cases where children are taken away.

And while those types of cases have lasting effects on a child, problems from neglect are worse, Verrill says.

“The effects can be far more devastating for a child who is suffering neglect,” she said.
Ther is also the problem of lasting effects from parental drug use. Verrill said methadone, a treatment to get users off of drugs like Oxycontin.

“What we’re seeing now are babies born addicted and they’re born addicted to methadone and their recovery, their withdrawal is far more serious, it’s far more difficult on the infant than recovery from cocaine or another drug,” she says.

Auger worries about the lasting effects on drug use similar to alcohol use by parents on children.

“Twenty years from now maybe even less than that we’re going to start seeing the effects in the children,” he said.
The effects on going through care can also be long lasting. While just less than 50 per cent of foster homes are Aboriginal, children are often going into strangers homes, away from their communities. This can lead to separation issues.

“I think it’s fairly traumatic for children because they’re leaving their home, they’re leaving the people that they know and rely on to care for them,” Verrill says.

And in up to 40 per cent of cases, the children are repeat cases, which means they come to learn and rely on the system. Some children will race upstairs and pack their bag when a case worker comes to the door because they know they are treated much better in a foster home.

“What’s very sad is that they’re very happy to come into care,” Verrill says.

There’s also a loss of culture if a child is placed in a non-aboriginal home out of their community. Auger, who is Ojibwa, said although he is well-educated in a Western system he will never know everything about his culture because he doesn’t speak the language.

“They lose their home but they also lose their culture.”

For those reasons, Dilico tries to place children with relatives whenever possible, which is called kinship care.

But it’s also getting the communities involved in customary care so a child can be placed with anyone they know in the community. Working closely with the community’s band, Auger said the future of Dilico’s role in child welfare will be to find homes for children so they can live where they know.


“Communities have a responsibility to look after they’re children, to look after their band members,” Auger says.

“I think communities can do a far better job because they know the family they know the relatives they know lots of stuff that we don’t know.”

That concept is as old as the communities themselves, but Auger said the problem is sometimes a 12,000 year-old system and the 60-year-old Ontario Child and Family Services act at odds.
“It just doesn’t work very well,” he says.

An example of that is the fact that community members or relatives who offer to take a child in aren’t compensated the way foster families are, Instead, they receive $135 a month through Ontario Works.

“Kids cost more than that,” Verrill said.

“Many of our parents don’t have the finances to support another child.”

Follow Jamie Smith on Twiter @jsmithreporting

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Tbnewswatch.com(26)

Comments

We've improved our comment system.
Delbert Grady says:
"Drugs are a huge, huge problem".

Well, there you go. Now its even more obvious why this will only get worse.

If you cant, or worse yet, wont identify the problem its only going to get worse.

Drugs arent the problem. Drugs are in fact a problem solver for those that actually have the prescriptions for them.

The problem isnt the drug. No. Its the person who decides to take and abuse the drug. They are the problem. They have a mental problem. One that wont be solved by taking drugs, or making excuses for taking them. People who enable by providing excuses or making the drug abusers life easier to continue that behaviour also share a mental problem as well.

So until people have the walnuts to put their finger on the problem, its bound to only get worse.

Now cue all those enablers who will provide more excuses for this behaviour. The same ones who will attack me, instead of attacking the problem. The same ones who are quick to attack because their beliefs are threatened.
2/5/2012 12:39:39 PM
animiki says:
Okay, I don't even necessarily disagree with you. People abuse drugs, so they become addicted to them, so they cease to function as productive adults, which has all sorts of knock-on effects on families, the community, law enforcement, social services, etc. I agree, you've done a pretty good job of reframing the problem in a way that's probably mostly right.

So what? The issue isn't the problem. The issue is the solution. This is where the whole system falls short (falls apart, actually). We want to offer services to drug abusers...sort of. We want to rehabilitate them...kind of. We want to punish them through law enforcement and corrections...in a way. Overall, we want to pretend the things we're doing are having some effect, when all they're really doing is costing money, time and effort for little effect.

A real solution is probably complicated, nuanced, involve many parties and will take a great deal of time and effort. Or do you have a quick fix in mind? Or any fix at all?
2/5/2012 7:19:01 PM
PC says:
A lot of grandparents are now raising their grandchildren for what ever reason. Many are relying on food banks where if they were compensated more this would not be the case.
I applaud grandparents who step in but they need more than that. They need help with the costs and they need a support system.
We are not as young as we used to be and taking care of young children and teens takes a lot of energy so the need for support has to be taken into consideration.
I certainly hope the government both provincial and federal are taking note and changes will come about soon.
Otherwise we will have a generation of lost young people.
2/5/2012 12:42:22 PM
gremlin says:
Please read my posts re: "get connected & mining opportunities". Also, lets go down "memory lane". "NDP accuse feds of neglecting natives" from 02/12/11 & read my posts from that story.

I told you so.
2/5/2012 1:16:06 PM
sweetazmaple says:
i have never seen article with so much lies in it , i can personally name at least 10 ppl that should not have there kids in there custody but than dilico goes to there house and doesn't do anything but yet again when you ask for help god forbid u do they threaten they are going to take your kids away , they hound you till no end and seems more and more every day its happening in the dilico system
they go where they are not needed but when they are needed they don't do crap , yes there is a drug problem dilico sometimes says " ok now u have a drug problem dear so you need to get treatment and when u get out u will get them back " but than again 8 weeks later they get there kids back and than they back doing drugs maybe it should be a yr they clean and sober before getting the kids back
also family doesn't get 135 from ontario works i know someone that took in her sisters kids for 8 months 5 kids to be exact and the " sister" was braggin that she got 952 bucks per child per month.
2/5/2012 1:31:22 PM
debt collector says:
I have a family member who works for Dilico and the stories she tells about the way these poor children are being treated is heartbreaking.

The last thing she or her co-workers want to do is remove a child from the family unit. Unfortunately when the parents are not capable of caring for their children, then an order of removal is the only option.

We aren't talking about model parents, these are adults who can't feed and cloth their children. Most don't send their children to school and if they do, the kids are filthy and hungry and suffering from low self esteem. How is a child suppose to learn with these anvils hanging over their heads?

Two thumbs up to Dilico for doing this very difficult job.
2/5/2012 5:55:09 PM
SG says:
This comment is way too simplistic for such a complicated system.

As for the comment about Ontario Works, I know this to be true: if you are not a licensed foster parent you can receive Ontario Works for children in your care. $200 per child per month. You can also apply for CTB - child tax benefit but it will be pro-rated depending on your income. If you are a licensed foster parent you are funded through the child and family service agencies like CAS and Dilico. That funding is much higher.

Please don't take people's 'bragging' to be the truth. It's not necessarily the truth. You can name whoever you like who 'shouldn't have their kids but don't cast stones, you don't really know what's going on.

Anybody who takes in children through Dilico and CAS certainly shouldn't be in it for the money. That's a disgrace. The reward of raising these children is incredible but it's definitely not monetary
2/6/2012 9:21:26 AM
the beaver..... says:
Every municipality in Ontario, if not Canada, needs to study this experience. Then follow the road map.
Next in line will be the inside workers. Then the city negotiators need to take a big strong stand to police. Their next contract needs to be zero % increase for at least 4 years. And there needs to be gradual reduction in the forces numbers by way of attrition and retirements.
In this way, the big ocean liner called the city of Thunder Bay can be turned around.
Council better listen up...its happening elsewhere now.

2/5/2012 1:31:46 PM
Random says:
After reading this article, I have to ask, what the hell does your post have to do with? Certainly not this story.
2/5/2012 5:33:54 PM
pagirl says:
Are you commenting on the right story??

Who's going to look after protecting us from all these lost souls that are going to turn to criminal activities someday, if you want there to be less police? You think you have to wait long for police response now......
2/5/2012 6:50:55 PM
userfriendly says:
I knew there would be a lot of opinions on here, but yours has got to be the most selfish I've read in a long time. Maybe you'll grow up one day pagirll and realize the world doesn't revolve around you.

Have you read the article? It's about the tragic effects of addiction on innocent children.
2/6/2012 1:28:15 PM
unheard says:
this is a government issue they legalized the wrong drug, trying to get a piece of the drug trade money there is no use for synthetic heroin. They pretend to care but in truth the plan is working probably better then expected. They want nothing less then everyoneto be dependent on them and not being able to find umm "help" else where
2/5/2012 1:39:24 PM
gremlin says:
The problem is "social services" has become an "industry" & there are too many people that are relying on their "social service jobs" to "truly want things to change". This applies to "government workers" @ all levels & "band administration" across the country.

We can thank the UNIONS for this.

Natives are just "casualities" of the GREED.
2/5/2012 2:33:26 PM
SG says:
Unions are to blame? You need to expand your comment because this make NO sense at all. I highly doubt those in 'social service jobs' want CHILDREN to suffer as they do just so they can keep their job. Please.
2/6/2012 11:11:35 AM
Delbert Grady says:
It makes perfect sense.

As with all bureaucracy positions, their jobs and salaries wont be there if they truly solved these problems they pretend to work hard on.

Thats why they work so hard to not put their finger on the problem; their livlihoods rely on their continued failure.

These departments are getting bigger and bigger, but theres never been a decrease in these issues. Its excellent evidence which assures us everything theyre doing is wrong.

The only success stories are from the ones who helped themselves. They realized they had to take control of their destiny. A great example can be found here in the letters section.

So keep supporting these overpaid and failing "services", but its obvious theyre only helping themselves, even if they believe otherwise.
2/6/2012 3:12:03 PM
Dan Dan says:
Where are all the dimwits that want to legalize marijuana?
2/5/2012 5:34:23 PM
dad3192 says:
How about investigating the doctors that prescribe these drugs? Why does Thunder Bay need so many methadone clinics run by out of town doctors? What a cash grab for them!!
How about investigating "suboxone"....a different type of medication for opiate addicition? Maybe because it work better, people will get off the opiates, and the doctors and drug companies wont make so much money??
Hmmmm....I wonder......
2/5/2012 5:40:23 PM
Delbert Grady says:
Why do you want to blame the doctors? Thats like blaming your mechanic because you got nailed for speeding.

People who do not place the blame where it firmly belongs are making the problem worse.

Its not the drug company's fault people are addicted to a drug thats pretty much natural, and works for its intended purposes so well.

Its the abusers fault. They need to suffer the consequences of their actions before they will ever face their demons. Will there be some friendly fire and collateral damage? Yes.

But the rest of society needs this to stop.
2/6/2012 10:59:52 AM
SG says:
Let's take a drug like oxy. Originally created and to be prescribed those who were dying of cancer etc.

Then doctors began prescribing it for other things, like back pain, degenerating discs, etc. etc.

I want to blame the doctors for handing out an incredibly addictive drug they never should have handed out. It's not all their fault but they DO have ownership. It's like blaming your mechanic for your brakes failing when they just replaced them.

Collateral damage, at least in this story, is children. You're okay with that?

In the end, I suppose, I could care less about blame. I'd rather fix the issue.
2/6/2012 12:13:16 PM
dad3192 says:
also..."the beaver"....what does any of this have to do with the police and raises? When the firemen get the same type of raise, will it be their problem too??? Or are you just another police basher that doesn't like the police for some reason?? And what would the reason be???
2/5/2012 5:44:32 PM
shake'n'myhead says:
Oh Great One please provide me safe passage as I mingle amongst the fire breathers.
The story is about children being neglected by parents or guardians who abuse drugs, cocaine, heroin, prescription medication and the difficulties Dilico is experiencing trying to find suitable homes for these children.
Every person has their own life story and for what ever reasons some people take drugs, be it pills, alcohol or what ever. That is their business not yours.
What matters is that there are all those children out there ranging in age from newborn to 18 years of age who are displaced from their families, heritage and customs. I'm sure the ones that can read, if they were to read the comments made on this site would be convinced that there is no hope, no future, I'm a plague on society.

Does it really matter what race, nationality, or religion these casualties of life are?
2/5/2012 6:00:08 PM
shake'n'myhead says:
Are you on glue???
You are grasping at crap that has absolutely nothing to do with this story. The story is about children in foster care. These children could be in foster care because of physical abusive parents, left unsupervised for hours or days for whatever reason.
Why not go look up an news article on "Katemine", or "Spice" and ask the same stupid question.
Why is it so important to try and infer something into a news report.

God forbid someone do something good like rescue a puppy that fell through the ice. You would then start blaming city council for issuing dog licenses, the police and fire services because they didn't get there soon enough or spent the extra minute to ensure the situation was over.

Enlighten us all. What happened in your life that makes you respond to news articles with such negativity?
2/6/2012 2:04:41 PM
stopthehandouts says:
There needs to be law so parents are held criminally responsible for having more children when previous children are already in foster care or taken away from parent neglect.

enough is enough...pretty sad when the babies are born addicted to oxy's from birth...not a great start to life.
2/7/2012 11:13:26 AM
Yer joking says:
Aren't statistics and percentages wonderful! They can be used to get,give, delegate, justify and ignore. All from the same numbers and they are all true! Stats can make or break an organization dependingon who has the most honestface.
2/7/2012 7:04:16 PM
ThunderBayFullOfCrime says:
I don't blame the doctors, I blame stupid people. Doesn't anyone research anything before they put it in their bodies? No one forced these meds down their throats, people gobbled them up like candy.
2/8/2012 12:04:11 AM
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