Nova Scotia government looks to lighten load of overworked child protection staff
CBC
The Department of Community Services is promising to follow through on dozens of recommendations put forward to try to improve the working conditions of social workers who handle child protection cases.
Those social workers have complained for years about the stress of carrying large caseloads and working extra long hours.
The recommendations outlined in a report presented late last year to senior government officials and shared this week with CBC News stems from union grievances filed by 21 social workers in 2017.
In a memo to staff, Deputy Minister Tracey Taweel spelled out what her department plans to do to try to make working conditions better, including:
The recommendations come from four labour-management working groups formed in 2019. They considered five themes — PTSD presumptive coverage, workload, after hours, safety culture and retention of new social workers.
The co-chairs of those working groups presented their recommendations to government last November.
"Since the original grievance was filed ... we have been actively working to improve working conditions and sit in agreement of these recommendations," Taweel wrote in the December memo.
"I look forward to working collaboratively on these initiatives."
Jackie Barkley, a longtime social worker and advocate for change within the department, applauded the move to reduce the administrative burden on caseworkers.
"It will help," said Barkley, who sometimes works under contract to the province. "It's a good thing, a lot of years too late."
"What social workers were articulating [in 2017] was that they could not do social work because they were like case administrators. They had to deal with all the infrastructure of the child protection case which is ... quite complicated."
She said burnout continued to be a serious problem among social workers assigned to child protection work, leading many to transfer to less stressful jobs or to leave government altogether.
According to figures provided by the department, the number of front-line social workers and supervisors has increased by 26 full-time positions, from 391 in 2014-15 to 417 this year. During those seven years, the number of referrals has increased from 12,239 to 15,419.
According to the department, social workers are responsible for roughly 24 cases on average. The department would like to see that drop to 20 cases per social worker, ideally made up of cases that range from low to high risk.