Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Permanent Guardianship: Another Option For Creating Family

Darpan News Desk, 28 Nov, 2019 08:46 PM

    Merissa Giesbrecht and her husband Jason never imagined that their path to finally having the family they had dreamed about would arrive through a distant relative.

     

    While November is Adoption Awareness month, a time to recognize adoptive parents and the more than 750 children in B.C. who are seeking a permanent home through adoption, it is also a good time to learn about other options for creating long-term, loving relationships for children and youth. Permanent guardianship is one of those options.


    The Giesbrechts met years earlier in a community theatre performance, where a chaste on-stage peck on the cheek led to their real-life romance. As a little girl, Merissa imagined growing up, getting married and having children of her own. But like a growing number of people, she discovered that when it comes to pregnancy, there are no guarantees.


    At first, physicians would give stock answers to her concerns about not being able to conceive. “You’re young, you’re healthy, it’s only a matter of time,” they would say. Excruciating months of dashed hopes turned into years, exploratory surgery revealed no definitive answers and the couple began to accept that having a baby wasn’t to be.


    “I really wanted to experience pregnancy and I know I’m not alone in experiencing this,” Merissa said. She had never previously considered fostering or adoption.


    Then one day, the couple heard about a relative who had a baby that had been taken into foster care. Through a series of conversations, the Giesbrechts came to understand that because their relative was not able to care for the baby and never would be, they had the opportunity to love and care for this tiny extended family member. A permanent transfer of custody of a child from a parent to another person was the route that worked best for their unique circumstances.


    What followed was a whirlwind of paperwork, home studies with social workers learning about their lifestyle and a lot of road trips.


    As part of a planned transition, the Giesbrechts began making the long trip from Port Edward, near Prince Rupert, to Quesnel — a 12-hour drive away. They did the journey every two weeks so they could bond with the baby girl who had been born to Jason’s cousin.


    Merissa described the moment, months later, when they were able to bring her home. “Not long into the long drive back home, I looked over at my husband and burst into tears. So much had to happen for her to come into our lives.”


    Now, their focus is all about the little girl’s future. “That need I had to mother has been satisfied completely,” Merissa said. And when the subject comes up, Merissa tells the now three-year-old child about her “tummy mummy,” or biological mom, because she wants to be sure “she’ll always know where she came from.”


    As permanent guardians, the Giesbrechts receive a monthly payment to cover the child’s basic care needs – a payment that increased as of April 2019 as part of a broader rate hike for caregivers. Merissa said they are lucky to be in a financial position to put some of that money into a Registered Education Savings Plan.


    Now, at the end of each day when they tuck the young girl into bed, they reflect on how seemingly impossible dreams can come true, in their own time and in the most unpredictable ways.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    OTTAWA - Conservative MPs want Canada's intelligence agency to probe whether a former Canadian ambassador is encouraging China to interfere in the upcoming federal election.    

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics
    Effective immediately, all hot food and any type of cooking or barbecuing is banned in Coquitlam's Mundy Park.

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax
     Nov. 12, 1995: Brenda Way — known as "Pitt Bull" — was murdered and her body left in a parking lot behind a Dartmouth apartment building sometime in the early morning hours.

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat
    EDMONTON - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is dismissing claims by conservative politicians that national unity is under threat.

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground
    "When I drove through, I saw a trailer that was all twisted, up in the air," said Andre Parent, a Montrealer who lives at the Camping Horizon campground in summer.

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground

    Search On For Prominent Businessman, Son After Helicopter Goes Missing In Quebec

    Search On For Prominent Businessman, Son After Helicopter Goes Missing In Quebec
    A search is under way for a prominent Quebec businessman and his son, who did not return from a fishing trip in northern Quebec as planned.

    Search On For Prominent Businessman, Son After Helicopter Goes Missing In Quebec