Nunavut MLAs demand transparency after investigation into unlicensed group homes
CBC
Nunavut MLAs are urging the territorial government to release the findings of an internal investigation that looked into the placement of Nunavut youth in unlicensed group homes in Alberta.
Premier P.J. Akeeagok ordered the internal investigation last May, after reporting from Radio-Canada revealed that eight young Nunavummiut had been placed in these group homes.
The children were placed with a company called Ever Bright, which said its licences were valid until January 2023. Alberta Children's Services told Radio-Canada that the licences were canceled in April 2022 — a few months before the youth were placed in the facilities.
The province wasn't alerted to the youths' presence until months after their arrival.
In December last year, Lamb & O'Brien, the Ottawa-based firm that conducted the review, submitted its findings to the territory's Department of Executive and Intergovernmental Affairs. That department is led by Akeeagok.
Radio-Canada requested a copy of the investigation through an Access to Information request. The report came back almost completely redacted.
In a written statement to Radio-Canada, Akeeagok's press secretary Michele LeTourneau said the internal investigation won't be made public.
A spokesperson for the premier also said last spring there were no plans to make the review findings public.
Jane Bates, Nunavut's representative for children and youth, says the government did not tell her office when the investigation findings were submitted last year.
In its five-year strategic plan presented to the legislative assembly last month, the Department of Family Services said it is committed to transparency around the "necessary changes" it needs to make to its mandate.
For Bates, out-of-territory placements require an increased level of vigilance from everyone involved.
"The checks and balances are absolutely imperative to be put in place," Bates said. "The farther you get away from your family and your community, the more at risk you become because they don't have the same supervision and you don't have those connections anymore," she said.
"I'm sure for the most part most facilities are safe and there's not issues — but there needs to be that hyper-vigilance."
Graham Steele, Nunavut's information and privacy commissioner, reviewed the way the department handled Radio-Canada's access to information request, including the redactions made to it and how they were applied.