Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

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

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2025 04:36 PM
  • 'Staggering' number of families struggle in B.C.'s system for disabled kids: advocate

British Columbia's children's representative says the province is at a "threshold moment" for fixing the underfunded and fragmented system of supports for children with disabilities that has left thousands of families struggling to get help.

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.

The document, published Wednesday, says the representative's office has produced a dozen reports making recommendations to fix the system, but the government has been slow to respond, often reacting to tragedies rather than making broader improvements.

Charlesworth said there have been years of good intentions to change the system that weren't sustained.

"If we turn away now when we see families that are truly coming apart at the seams and are contemplating placing their children in care in order to get the services that they need, if we don't step in and figure out how to move things forward and create more equity and create more access to the services ... then that's on us. We have failed as a system," she said.

Charlesworth said B.C. needs a collective approach across ministries to ensure that critical progress actually happens.

She said the province needs to implement immediate funding increases, stronger mental health services, equitable access to education and supports and a cross-government data management system.

She told reporters it's important no one look away from the problems.

"I do believe that we are at a threshold moment. It's going to be really hard with the fiscal situation that we're in, with all of the distractions of what's happening south of the border and many people feeling under threat and under siege and overwhelmed, but I do feel like we have no choice."

Jodie Wickens, minister of children and family development, said in an interview on Wednesday that she is proud of the work her ministry has accomplished, while also acknowledging that there is more work to be done.

Before entering politics, Wickens was executive director of the Autism Support Network and said her experience, which includes being an aunt to children with disabilities, means she has an understanding of the frustrations faced by families.

Wickens said her ministry has increased respite for families and improved mental health supports.

“There is more work to be done, but we are doing things that I think are really making a difference,” she said.

The representative's calls to action come ahead of a final report expected this year on a revamp of the provincial framework of services provided to children and youth with disabilities that was paused in 2022 after significant pushback from families. 

A statement from Charlesworth says a "staggering" number of families are at their breaking point amid the underfunded system that is almost impossible to navigate. 

“This prolonged under-resourcing is resulting in heartbreaking and frankly shocking situations that should be a wake-up call for us all," she said. 

"We listened to families tell us they would give up their kids to get the care they needed, there were others who were close to harming themselves and their children because they saw no other answers, and still others who have been waiting on wait-lists as they watch their kids lose their childhood.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Driver of stolen truck smashes store window

Driver of stolen truck smashes store window
Police in Kelowna are investigating after the driver of a stolen truck allegedly smashed through the front window of a store and stole large amounts of sports memorabilia. The R-C-M-P says the stolen white 2004 Ford F550 flat deck was taken about 10 minutes before the business was broken into and at least two suspects fled in a different vehicle.

Driver of stolen truck smashes store window

Suspect arrested in New Westminster stabbing

Suspect arrested in New Westminster stabbing
Police in New Westminster say they've arrested a suspect after a man was stabbed on Sunday. Police say they responded to the scene around 7 a.m. and found a man with a stab wound to his shoulder, who was transported to hospital with non life-threatening injuries.

Suspect arrested in New Westminster stabbing

Cutting energy to U.S. in response to Trump tariffs is 'absurd,' says Bloc leader

Cutting energy to U.S. in response to Trump tariffs is 'absurd,' says Bloc leader
Yves-François Blanchet's position runs counter to that of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and most premiers — including Quebec's François Legault — who have said everything is on the table in negotiations with the Trump administration. Blanchet told The Canadian Press in an interview Monday that Canada's best response would be counter-tariffs and it would be "absurd" to cut energy exports.

Cutting energy to U.S. in response to Trump tariffs is 'absurd,' says Bloc leader

Legal arguments to continue next week in five hockey players' sex assault case

Legal arguments to continue next week in five hockey players' sex assault case
More legal arguments are expected next week in the sexual assault case of five former members of Canada's world junior hockey team as they prepare to face trial this spring. Dillon Dube, Carter Hart, Michael McLeod, Cal Foote and Alex Formenton were charged with sexual assault early last year in an incident that allegedly took place in London, Ont., nearly six years earlier.

Legal arguments to continue next week in five hockey players' sex assault case

Trudeau says 'everything is on the table' for response to Trump tariffs

Trudeau says 'everything is on the table' for response to Trump tariffs
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday that if President Donald Trump wants to usher in a "golden age" for the United States, he'll need the energy, critical minerals and resources that Canada is ready to provide. The federal cabinet is meeting in Montebello, Que., for a retreat focused on the Canada-U. S. trade strategy.

Trudeau says 'everything is on the table' for response to Trump tariffs

Parts of tundra releasing more carbon than they absorb: study

Parts of tundra releasing more carbon than they absorb: study
The study, published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change, said the change appeared to have taken place in "many tundra regions" and called it a "noteworthy shift in carbon dynamics."

Parts of tundra releasing more carbon than they absorb: study