PUBLISHER'S NOTE: "A powerful column that brings us closer to the truth of Motherisk - and the hollow core of Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. The truest headline I have seen so far in the aftermath of release of the Motherisk report came from Scoop. "Canada's lost kids. Scores ripped away from their parents. An excellent column. Too tightly written to reduce..
Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.
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MOTHERISK: Hospital for Sick Children: Ontario: Aftermath: (3); National Post columnist Chrris Selley Chris Selley: Motherisk is the Ontario Liberals' unacknowledged — and worst — scandal.
COMMENTARY: "Motherisk is the Ontario Liberals' unacknowledged — and worst — scandal," by Chris Selley, Published by The National Post on March 1, 2018.
SUB-HEADING: "In the history of child apprehension perpetrated by Canadian governments for terrible reasons, 56 isn’t a big number. It’s a big number in the 21st century, though."
Legal aid funding for parents in
these situations was, naturally, a joke. “The system-wide respect for
the (Motherisk) testing, coupled with the relaxed standards for evidence
in child protection cases, made positive results virtually impossible
to refute,” the report finds. And even if they could be refuted, our
mockery of a justice system often took much or all of a childhood to
sort it out.
“Temporary hearings often do not happen for many months,” the report finds. “After the temporary hearing, many more months and possibly years may elapse before the matter reaches the final hearing. By then, the children may have settled into a new home and bonded with new caregivers.” You can imagine the gut-wrenching decisions that necessitated. What if you’re vindicated as a fit parent but your child doesn’t even remember you, or is happy with loving adoptive parents who can better provide for her? Or what if you’re not vindicated? Do you keep fighting, or just hope to form a relationship with your child once she turns 18? There has been much talk of systemic racism since the report’s release, and rightly so: Indigenous families were wildly disproportionately affected by this catastrophe, and while the commission doesn’t have data on Black families, we know they are wildly disproportionately affected by CAS interventions in Toronto. On a purely practical point, Susan Lang’s 2015 review of Motherisk’s hair analysis procedures found the lab did not properly account for the fact that drugs will accumulate in higher concentrations in black hair than in light hair. Oops! But while unconscious bias certainly plays a role, the real determining factor here is poverty, the report concludes — and more to the point, powerlessness. The government screwed over these parents because it could. That’s what governments do. It knew they couldn’t fight back and it knew not many of their powerful fellow citizens would object, because they face no prospect of remotely similar peril. Beaman’s report has all manner of suggestions that Attorney-General Yasir Naqvi promises to take on board. None should have been necessary in a civilized society such as Ontario purports to be. Naqvi signalled this week he might be open to “compensating” affected parents, as well he should. But you can’t compensate in any meaningful way for stealing someone’s kid under false pretences and then spending the kid’s entire childhood litigating it. Basically, as it stands, Ontario is unequipped to take people’s children away and offer them any guarantee of swift due process. Until such time as it is so equipped, except in the most extreme of cases, it should get out of the child-snatching business altogether."
The entire commentary can be read at:
“Temporary hearings often do not happen for many months,” the report finds. “After the temporary hearing, many more months and possibly years may elapse before the matter reaches the final hearing. By then, the children may have settled into a new home and bonded with new caregivers.” You can imagine the gut-wrenching decisions that necessitated. What if you’re vindicated as a fit parent but your child doesn’t even remember you, or is happy with loving adoptive parents who can better provide for her? Or what if you’re not vindicated? Do you keep fighting, or just hope to form a relationship with your child once she turns 18? There has been much talk of systemic racism since the report’s release, and rightly so: Indigenous families were wildly disproportionately affected by this catastrophe, and while the commission doesn’t have data on Black families, we know they are wildly disproportionately affected by CAS interventions in Toronto. On a purely practical point, Susan Lang’s 2015 review of Motherisk’s hair analysis procedures found the lab did not properly account for the fact that drugs will accumulate in higher concentrations in black hair than in light hair. Oops! But while unconscious bias certainly plays a role, the real determining factor here is poverty, the report concludes — and more to the point, powerlessness. The government screwed over these parents because it could. That’s what governments do. It knew they couldn’t fight back and it knew not many of their powerful fellow citizens would object, because they face no prospect of remotely similar peril. Beaman’s report has all manner of suggestions that Attorney-General Yasir Naqvi promises to take on board. None should have been necessary in a civilized society such as Ontario purports to be. Naqvi signalled this week he might be open to “compensating” affected parents, as well he should. But you can’t compensate in any meaningful way for stealing someone’s kid under false pretences and then spending the kid’s entire childhood litigating it. Basically, as it stands, Ontario is unequipped to take people’s children away and offer them any guarantee of swift due process. Until such time as it is so equipped, except in the most extreme of cases, it should get out of the child-snatching business altogether."
The entire commentary can be read at: