Nunavut's child advocate still waiting for answers a year after children removed from unlicensed group homes
CBC
Nunavut's Representative for Children and Youth says she is still trying to find out what happened to several children who were removed from unlicensed group homes in Alberta last year.
Jane Bates says questions remain about where these children are, and whether Nunavut's child welfare system is able to provide adequate services.
In March 2023 reporting from Radio-Canada revealed that several children from Nunavut had been placed in three unlicensed group homes in Alberta last year.
In an interview with Radio-Canada, Bates said her office is currently looking into the fate of those children, with the goal of releasing a report soon.
The Department of Family Services confirmed that it had removed the children on March 31, 2023 from the Ever Bright Complex Needs Support Services in Airdrie, Alta. They were subsequently placed in another group home, Petmier Care, in Edmonton.
Bates also said two other children from Nunavut were already living at Petmier Care at the time.
A few weeks later, all of the children were sent back to Nunavut, Bates said.
"All of the children were then repatriated back to Nunavut, back to their various communities or parents. Some were repatriated back, I assume into group care or foster care homes back here in Nunavut," Bates said.
"And so really the question remains is what happened? Where are those children now?"
Radio-Canada made several attempts to speak with the Department of Family Services, but they did not provide comment or grant an interview.
Interview requests sent to Petmier Care also went unanswered.
The Ever Bright care homes in Alberta didn't have the necessary permits required under the pan-Canadian protocol that governs inter-provincial placements. Nunavut also did not inform Alberta about the children until months after their arrival.
Bates fears the problems that led to the removal of children from the first group homes also occurred in the case of Petmier Care.
Being repeatedly displaced is "traumatizing" and "difficult" for these children, Bates said.