Friday, April 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Adoption Rates 'Disappointing,' Declining This Year, Says Children's Rep

The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2017 01:37 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's child and youth representative says a government plan to increase adoption rates for young people in care is faltering.
     
    Bernard Richard says in a report that he is disappointed that adoption rates have declined this year, especially for Indigenous children and youth.
     
    He says the drop in adoption placements follows marked improvements starting in 2015.
     
    His report says for the first six months of this fiscal year 84 children and youth in care were adopted and of those only 16 were Indigenous young people.
     
    Richard says the current adoption rates are well behind those for 2015 and 2016, where the number of adoptions were 362 and 284 children and youth, respectively.
     
    He is calling on the government to do a better job finding families for these children, saying the declining numbers represent individual children and youth looking for hope, love and a sense of belonging.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination
    In an interview Tuesday, Liane Tessier released details of an agreement that she says comes after years of complaints about abusive and disrespectful behaviour from her male counterparts.

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination

    What Canadians Were Curious About: Google Searches Suggest 2017 A Tough Year

      Google has released its 17th annual survey of top-trending searches, and top-of-mind topics for Canucks in 2017 ranged from devastating hurricanes to deceased rock icons to the continuing political circus south of the border.

    What Canadians Were Curious About: Google Searches Suggest 2017 A Tough Year

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise
    TORONTO — New stricter mortgage rules are expected to slow the housing market next year, but prices are still expected to rise about five per cent, according to a report by Royal LePage.

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau says the results of four federal byelections Monday night show the Liberals are on the right track with their focus on middle-class Canadians.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive

    Halifax Police Charge 66-Year-Old Man With Manslaughter In Manor Pushing Death

    A 66-year-old man has been charged with manslaughter in relation to a pushing death of a fellow resident at a Halifax apartment complex.

    Halifax Police Charge 66-Year-Old Man With Manslaughter In Manor Pushing Death

    Grief For Saskatchewan Foster Mom When Grinch Makes Off With Christmas Treasures

    Grief For Saskatchewan Foster Mom When Grinch Makes Off With Christmas Treasures
    A foster mother to five children in Prince Albert, Sask., says her heart sank when a grinch stole her van that was carrying Christmas presents for her kids and an anniversary gift for her husband.

    Grief For Saskatchewan Foster Mom When Grinch Makes Off With Christmas Treasures

    PrevNext