With hearings over, inquiry into Quebec's youth protection turns to solutions - Action News
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With hearings over, inquiry into Quebec's youth protection turns to solutions

After hearing from more than 200witnesses, many with harrowing tales, a commission looking into Quebec's youth protection system must now come up with recommendations.

'It's a systemic problem,' says commission's vice-chair, Andr Lebon, after hearing from 200 witnesses

Rgine Laurent, left, who chaired the commission looking at problems in Quebec's youth protection system, says she is confident the Legault government is prepared make necessary changes once her commission reports. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

A lack of funding, burnt-out staff and children whose cases slipped through the cracks: a commission of inquiry into Quebec's youth protection system heard about these and other problems from more than 200 witnesses many with harrowing tales.

As the hearings wrapped, the commission's vice-chair, Andr Lebon, said the testimony has shown there no single thing that needs fixing in the system. Everything does.

"It's a systemic problem," Lebonsaid. "We have to look at it like an evolution, and we have to be there at all the steps."

The commission, led by a nurse and former union leader, Rgine Laurent, wasstruck by the Legault government lastMay, in response topublic outcry over the 2018death in Granby of a seven-year-oldwhose case had been followed by social workers for years.

The girl was found in critical condition in her father's home and died in hospital a day later.

Youth protection experts and union representatives sounded the alarm about an underfundedsystem in crisis across the province, including at the agency serving English Montrealers, Batshaw Youth and Family Centres.

The Quebec government announced last year it would invest $47 million to hire 400 new social workers and reduce wait lists for evaluating cases that had been signalled to youth protection authorities.

Laurent said Friday she isdisturbed by the extent of the suffering of some witnesses who were placed in the system, as well as of the social workers charged with protecting them.

The hearings began last fall and wrapped upThursday. In recent weeks, the hearings were moved online, to comply with public health regulations during the pandemic.

Laurent said she's confident the Legault government is prepared to listen and make the necessary changes.

"My strong voice will remain," she said.

With files from La Presse Canadienne