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A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social Work For internal CRCF reference only
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A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario

McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families1st Dec 2010

Dr Wendy ThomsonMcGill School of Social Work

For internal CRCF reference only

Page 2: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Today’s presentation

• Introducing the Commission

• Child welfare in Ontario Today

• A vision for sustainability

• What needs to Change

• A Four tiered strategy

Page 3: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

• Launched in November 2009 by the Minister for MCYS

• A 3 member Commission with a 3 year mandate to develop and implement solutions to promote the sustainability of child welfare.

• Reports to the Minister, has legal powers to issue directives, and make recommendations to the Minister. •The Ministry’s rationale for the Commission

Rapid sector growth over the last decade has not been fully offset by increases in volumes or in growth of the child welfare population.

Government fatigue with successive years of MCYS requesting end-of-year “mitigation” for CAS deficits

2006 Auditor General’s Report casting doubt regarding the management of child welfare in Ontario (both within MCYS and CASs)

Concerns regarding outcomes for children in the care of CAS Recognition within MCYS that the sector was not well understood in terms

of cost drivers, sources of variance, outcomes and overall performance

Introducing the Commission

3

Page 4: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

104%

77%

27%48% 48%

36%

Expenditures* Staffing InvestigationsCompleted

On-GoingProtection

Cases

Chldren in Care Days Care

Increase in Expenditures and Staffing not Explained by Increases in Service Volumes1998/99 to 2008/09

Overall increase in expenditures on child welfare (when adjusted for inflation) over the last decade has been more than double the increase in service volumes.

* Expenditures are based on real 1998/99 dollars assuming a constant CPI of 2.5%

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Page 5: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Outcome Former youth in care(Results from US and Canadian research studies)

Canadian youth population (ages 15-25)

Didn’t complete high school 27 to 75% 15%

Unemployed 46% 14%

Receive public assistance 38% 6% a

Experienced homelessness 45 to 90% -

Pregnant at an early age 30% b 6%

Involved in justice system 60% 2%

Emotional/mental health problems

50% 18%

These statistics are not direct comparisons as they are not based on controlled sampling within single research projects.a Total Canadian populationb Of the 30% of former Crown wards who became pregnant at an early age, 60% became re-involved in the child welfare system as parents.

The data in the table below compiled by MCYS heightened concerns regarding the significantly poorer outcomes for youth in care than for the general population. Note that data is not available on outcomes for the 80 to 90% of children who are served by CASs in their own homes. Similarly, we have not yet compared these outcomes with youth who have grown up in lower income communities which is the comparative demographic group for the majority of CAS clients.

Poorer Outcomes for Youth In Care

Source: MCYS Briefing on Child Welfare Outcomes, 5

Academic Laptop
given the invalidity of these stats and the nature of the comparison, I would delete it
underwen
See earlier comments. Have a look at the repositioning of Outcomes in the updated document... .slides 16 .. and slide 22 (or soemwhere around there)
Page 6: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

The Commission’s Core principles

• A focus on children, youth and families• Transparency• Objectivity based on evidence and lived experience• Iterative, action-oriented process• Boldness• A spirit of partnership• Respect for diversity • Recognition of the unique needs of aboriginal children &

communities

Page 7: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Child Welfare in Ontario Today• 53 CAS serving 120,000 families & 310,000 children each year• Close to 6.4 million days in substitute care• Over 18,000 children in care (foster homes, group homes, residential treatment facilities)• About 90% of children served by CAS are at home with their families• About 1,000 adoptions through CAS annually• 8,800 CAS staff• Hundreds of volunteers – drivers, tutors, special friends, etc.• Over 800 volunteer board members of CASs and Foundations.

Page 8: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Policy context for child welfare• Shifting choices on key dimensions of child welfare:

• Mandate:• Protecting children – supporting families

• State’s role:• least intrusive - more intrusive

• Service organisation• Stand alone protection – integrated childrens’ services

• style of decision-making:• Professional judgment – codified, rule-based procedures

Page 9: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Recent policy trends in Ontario• To 1990s, a ‘least intrusive’ bias, child welfare functioning

independently, intervention relying on discretion of child protection workers and supervisors.

• Late 1990s, following a series of high profile child deaths, sees Child Welfare Reform moving to a more intrusive and proactive approach, emphasis on child protection and more standardised approaches to risk assessment. A move to ‘multi-service’ agencies in some areas.

• in 2006 the Transformation agenda – more balance between protection and support, more emphasis on collaboration, some recognition of community-based approach to aboriginal child welfare (“customary care”), continued emphasis on universal standards and tools.

Page 10: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Impact of Policy shifts

From 1998/99 to 2003/4 (a result of Child Welfare Reform) :

* Children coming into care increased rapidly.

* increase in CiC plus administrative and regulatory demands – resulted in rapid escalation of costs.

* Child welfare spending increased at 3 times the rate of all other Ontario government program spending (next slide)

Page 11: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

From 2003/4 to 2008/9, the result of the Transformation Agenda:

• New policy directions, such as differential response, kinship, permanency, arrested the growth in CiC;• spending growth returned to levels consistent with other Ontario funded programs.

Current funding• allocations to CAS determined by a 14 factor funding formula designed to incentivise transformation agenda and cover volume increases.

• formula results in variations - increases of 4% to decreases of 10% - in 2009/10; and difficulty with the size of the overall funding envelope ‘capped’.

Page 12: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

85%

10%18%

11%

38%

17%18%13%

1998/99 to 2004/05 2004/05 to 2008/09

Child Welfare Growth versus Other Sectors1998/99 to 2008/09 (% increase based on constant1998/99 dollars)

Note: Expenditures based on constant 1998/99 dollars

Child welfare spending growth in the last decade has outstripped all other sectors – however, the “Pre-Transformation” and “Post-Transformation” story is quite different.

104%

31%

62%

33%

1998/99 to 2008/09

Child WelfareOverall Ont Gov'tHealthEducation

Child welfare spending growth prior to Transformation outstripped all other sectors

Growth since Transformation is slightly less than other sectors

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Page 13: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Trends in Aboriginal Child welfare

• Very different service trends for aboriginal children – – Far more intrusive– Far more children in care– Despite CFSA provisions, many placed out of homes

and communities– 6 designated agencies, 7 working to become

designated.– Facing challenges of remoteness, mismatch in scale

of needs and agency capacity and funding

Page 14: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.
Page 15: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

A systemic approach to child welfare

• Our scope is child welfare, but ….– Families face obstacles from separately delivered

programs, with own mandates, access criteria, and institutional obstacles.

– Universal services don’t service most vulnerable well - schools, health care

– The “welfare of children” is a shared responsibility, not just CAS.

Page 16: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

A Vision for sustainable child welfare

A Future in which a modernized child welfare system functions as one of many programs working together to provide integrated, child-focused services fully aligned to improve outcomes for children.

Page 17: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.
Page 18: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

The Case for Change• Variable capacity amongst CAS• Variable CAS service models and culture• Variability in legal processes and delays• Insufficient inter-CAS collaboration & system-

wide focus• Focus on Compliance rather than performance

& outcomes• Too much expected of a funding formula• Fragmentation and poor coordination of MCYS

functions

Page 19: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.
Page 20: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.
Page 21: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.
Page 22: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

Much more to do….

• The Commission released its first report, in Ontario July 5, 2010. The report examines Ontario’s child welfare system as it stands today and how its policies, funding and service delivery have grown and changed in the past ten years:

• Towards Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario (full report)• Executive Summary• Unique Considerations for Aboriginal Youth and Children

• Working papers:

• http://www.sustainingchildwelfare.ca/the-commissions-work/

Page 23: A Strategy for Sustainable Child Welfare in Ontario McGill Centre for Research on Children & Families 1 st Dec 2010 Dr Wendy Thomson McGill School of Social.

• Working Papers and Backgrounders• As part of its principle of “transparency”, the

Commission publishes working papers and backgrounders to share some of the basis for recommendations and directions that arise from its work.

• Jurisdictional Comparisons of Child Welfare System Design • Working Paper: Reducing Administrative Burden in Child Welfare• Background Paper: Serious Occurrence Reporting• Background Paper: Modernizing the Tracking of High Risk Child Protection

Cases