Friday, January 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. faces child welfare social work 'crisis,' porn disrupts video announcing report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2025 01:03 PM
  • B.C. faces child welfare social work 'crisis,' porn disrupts video announcing report

British Columbia's children's representative says child welfare social workers in the province are "in a state of crisis" and it will likely take a decade to fix things, even with committed efforts.

But an online news conference with Jennifer Charlesworth after the report was released was interrupted when a participant shouted racial slurs and then began showing a pornographic video.

It took several minutes for the Zoom meeting to be shut down, then restarted using a new link.

The report describes an unhealthy work environment, characterized by stress, burnout and tragic public cases that have eroded the reputation of the Ministry of Children and Family Development as an attractive place to work.

It says the ministry has taken steps to improve the situation, including by centralizing screening, establishing a mobile response team and enhancing recruitment, but the actions "have not apparently made a material difference."

The 132-page report makes more than a dozen recommendations, including setting timelines for when they should be implemented.

They include calls for better training and pay, and public reporting of how actual staffing levels around the province compare with what is required.

Charlesworth is also repeating a long-standing call that dates back 30 years for mandatory legal professional regulation of child welfare workers to be in place by June 30, 2026, and a regulatory body created by April 2027.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire
Many of the 300,000 Ukrainians who have come to Canada on three-year emergency visas since 2022 face an uncertain future as their temporary resident permits come closer to expiring, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress warned Wednesday. Congress executive director Ihor Michalchyshyn said he met with Immigration Minister Marc Miller last week to ask his department to automatically renew the visas for another three years.

Ukrainians worry as their three-year emergency visas are set to expire

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday
The relationship between the U.S. and Canada has "fundamentally changed," regardless of whether U.S. President Donald Trump's promised tariffs on Canadian goods materialize on Saturday, according to the chair of a new B.C. cabinet "war room" to tackle the threat. Ravi Kahlon, who is also British Columbia's housing minister, said the provincial government would work to diversify the province's economy and reduce its reliance on the United States.

B.C. assembles 'war room' as U.S. tariff threat looms on Saturday

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report
A report says a plane was doing a training spin at a lower-than-recommended altitude when it went down in a lake near Edmonton, killing a flight instructor and a student pilot. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says the plane was working properly and the weather was fine when it crashed in August 2023.

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate
The latest report from Jennifer Charlesworth's office says up to 83,000 young people with disabilities are not receiving adequate services in the province, and while spending increased by 190 per cent in the 18 years her office has been in place, the majority of that went to salaries and a narrow set of programs.

'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate

Specialist wait lists for B.C. patients grow to 1.2 million people: doctors groups

Specialist wait lists for B.C. patients grow to 1.2 million people: doctors groups
Doctors of BC and the Consultant Specialists of BC say they surveyed nearly 1,000 specialists and found that about 1.2 million patients are waiting too long to see a health expert in areas such as cardiology, neurology, orthopedic surgery, and urology.

Specialist wait lists for B.C. patients grow to 1.2 million people: doctors groups

Canada can strike back swiftly if U.S. imposes tariffs, experts say

Canada can strike back swiftly if U.S. imposes tariffs, experts say
Canadian international trade lawyers say that if the U.S. follows through on President Donald Trump's threat to impose massive tariffs on Canada as early as Saturday, Ottawa could hit back with retaliatory tariffs almost immediately. Typically, Canada gives advance notice of any plan to impose tariffs and takes about a month to consult with industry representatives on tariff targets.

Canada can strike back swiftly if U.S. imposes tariffs, experts say