printer
Well-Known Member
We have programs where they try to get the kids in with Native families. But you need the families to step up and take them. And you can not just take a kid out of a dysfunctional situation and put them in another. The numbers say that there are a larger proportion of kids needing care that compared to non-native society. It is already hard enough to place the kids, many have issues also. A lot of them are born from mothers with substance abuse problems that give the kids a disadvantage. My sister has taught art classes throughout the province and said that she really has to keep the kids focused on what they are doing. She has a background in child development and has worked with the native community here for years.Im not sure if you understand what I meant.
There are lots of reasons kids end up in foster care, what I was getting at is that it would be nice if your government spent money on setting up foster programs that the indigenous peoples ran so that the kids could be in a system of people who look like them and not the European people that I am guessing it is made up of now.
It is a problem that does not have easy solutions. The Provincial government set up First Nation Child and Family Services. But there are not enough qualified people to run it with the ones there being burned out by the caseloads. We had one toddler killed by her Native parents
"An inquiry judge has found Manitoba child welfare fundamentally misunderstood its mandate to protect children and left a little girl who was murdered "defenceless against her mother's cruelty" and against the "sadistic violence" of the woman's boyfriend.
Five-year-old Phoenix Sinclair was killed by the couple in 2005 after prolonged and horrific abuse.
In his final report into her death, Commissioner Ted Hughes recommended Manitoba should take the lead to address the disproportionate number of aboriginal children in care across Canada.
"At least 13 times throughout her life, Winnipeg Child and Family Services received notice of concerns for Phoenix's safety and well-being from various sources, the last one coming three months before her death," Hughes wrote in his three-volume report released Friday. "Throughout, files were opened and closed, often without a social worker ever laying eyes on Phoenix.
"Unfortunately, the system failed to act on what it knew, with tragic results."
Phoenix was apprehended at birth and during her life 27 agency workers were involved in her file. She was repeatedly returned to her mother, Samantha Kematch, despite concerns about what the judge called the woman's indifference toward her daughter.
Kematch and Karl McKay neglected, confined, tortured and beat Phoenix. She ultimately died of extensive injuries on the cold basement floor of the couple's home on the Fisher River reserve. She was buried in a shallow grave by the community dump and Kematch continued to collect child subsidy cheques.
Both adults were convicted of first-degree murder in 2008.
"Phoenix was defenceless against her mother's cruelty and neglect, and the sadistic violence of McKay, whose identity was never researched by the agency, but about whom it had ample disturbing information," Hughes continued. "By not accessing and acting on the information it had, and by not following the roadmaps offered by clear-thinking workers, the child-welfare system failed to protect Phoenix and support her family."
The inquiry cost $14 million, sat for 91 days and heard from 126 witnesses. Hughes made 62 recommendations while noting that improvements have been made to the system, but more needs to be done."
Child welfare left Phoenix Sinclair at mercy of mom, boyfriend: judge
An inquiry judge has found Manitoba child welfare fundamentally misunderstood its mandate to protect children, leaving a murdered five-year-old girl "defenceless against her mother's cruelty" and the "sadistic violence" of the woman's boyfriend.
www.ctvnews.ca
Man accused of killing toddler tried to force abortion on mother, court records show
A Winnipeg man accused of abducting and fatally stabbing his toddler daughter tried to force the child's mother into an abortion not long after she became pregnant.
Court records obtained by CBC show the mother of the slain three-year-old was granted a domestic violence protection order after telling a provincial court official Frank Nausigimana assaulted her while pregnant, hoping to see her then-unborn fetus aborted.
Nausigimana, 28, is accused of first-degree murder after police say the estranged father abducted his daughter from her mother at knifepoint in her car in the Robertson neighbourhood before 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Nausigimana pleaded guilty in 2019 to assaulting the mother and was sentenced to a year of supervised probation. He was charged after attacking her inside a car in a dispute over her pregnancy on March 31, 2017.
The two were not in a romantic relationship but had been friends for about seven years at the time, she said.
And there are so many others like these fuck ups. Yes there are good people and bad. But take a culture where people are nomadic and plop them together on a patch of land with no real way to make a living but make sure you give them just enough money to survive, what does that do to a people's self worth? Even before Residential schools.
So there is a lot of trauma built into the society and resentment. There are successful bands, but the ones way out nowhere with nothing better to do and no future there for the kids, what does that breed? What is the solution? The band leaders want self government. But they do not like the gaze if the government, reporting on how they use funds. A band can have 2,000 members and the band's leader will look after his family first.
Here, another side of the child services problem. These break my heart.