November 1, 2002
Big Sister is Watching
by Robert T McQuaid
In April 2001 Brooke Latanville took her baby to the doctor. Her questions
about the effect on a six-week old baby of drawing blood for tests got a hostile
reaction. In a follow-up call from the doctor, she asked the doctor to
leave her alone. This exchange resulted in her and her husband losing
three of their children for nearly a year.
In a case in Dufferin County (in most cases, real names cannot be used), a
family took a child with pneumonia to the hospital. Routine x-rays
revealed a broken arm that had healed without treatment, provoking immediate
Children's Aid intervention. Later reexamination showed the the bone had
never been broken, but Children's Aid would not leave the family alone. A
year later the family fled the jurisdiction in a desperate effort to save
themselves from Children's Aid.
In a high-profile case reported by all the Canadian media Children's Aid in
Aylmer Ontario seized the children from a family that proudly admitted to
spanking their children with objects. A few days later when CAS questioned
another family from the same church, the Church of God, all the mothers and
children in the church, over a hundred people, fled Canada.
Why does Children's Aid snatch children in such a trigger-happy manner?
And how do they get such power?
Funding
Every year the Ontario legislature, in common with many other jurisdictions
throughout the western world, appropriates money for the protection of children.
Some reasons for their generosity are:
- Legislators may have the same naive view as others not involved with social services, that appropriating money for the protection of children does what it says.
- The social services industry that lives on the appropriations is well aware that it exists only on account of political beneficence. Consequently, they are inclined to political activity and lobbying to get the appropriations increased. Parents who believe children are theirs by natural right see no need to lobby.
- The social service bureaucracy can threaten elected officers. This is the most subtle, and invisible influence, absent even from some of the scholarly works on the subject. Should a cabinet officer decline to provide funding or support legislation desired by the social services industry, they threaten to issue a press release branding the officer as a defender of child abusers (or wife batterers or deadbeat dads). Normally, a politician's career cannot survive such an attack.
Agencies
In child protection, the funded agencies identify children in need of
protection, take them into what they euphemistically call `care', and fight any
legal battles necessary to sever their connection with their parents. The
children may be adopted, or kept in foster care indefinitely. The largest
single item of expense is usually foster care.
Most of the details of the operation of child protection agencies are closely
guarded secrets. For this paragraph I have to rely on an analysis by Doug
Quirmbach of agencies in the USA, likely similar to Ontario. At the agency
level, the administrators are faced with an appropriation providing a per diem
rate for foster care. The rate paid to the agency exceeds what the agency
pays to the foster parents, thereby covering overhead. The reimbursement
rate also depends on the special needs of the child, that is, a child with a
disability, such as mental retardation or deafness, gets a higher rate than a
normal child. Consequently, the agency profits more from placing a special
needs child than a normal one. One child may even have two evaluations.
An evaluation at a low level of need justifies a low per diem payment to foster
parents; another at a high level of need justifies a high per diem rate from the
appropriation. Once a foster care placement of this kind has been made, it
is a continuing source of revenue for the agency, making them unwilling to have
the child adopted or returned to his parents. In Ontario, foster care rates
start at $25 per day for the family, reimbursement rates for the agency for a
special needs child may go as high as $100 per day.
For a person who spends appropriated funds, the worst possible sin is failure to
spend all of the money available within the allotted time. To get the
funds appropriated for child protection, the agencies must place the requisite
number of children in foster care. Legislative generosity has placed children in
foster care at levels far in excess of need.
Child Protection
Child protectors use terminology extending that of George Orwell. Kidnapping
a child is `apprehension', the plaintiff is the `applicant', the accused family
is the `respondent', the institutions of forcible confinement are called `care',
a contractor who houses a child for money is a `foster parent', parents and
foster parents alike are `caregivers', permanent legal separation between parent
and child is `crown wardship'.
In Ontario the agency that does the child protection work is called the
Children's Aid Society, so I will call them CAS from here on. A large part
of the story comes from my interviews with other parents in Dufferin County
Ontario, where I have been organizing opposition since my own son was snatched
in 1999 at the age of three years.
What does CAS do when they have to get so many kids into foster care? They
cast their net far and wide for tips. The laws of Ontario require anyone in a
child care profession, such as teachers, doctors and day-care workers, to report
any incident that may be construed as child-abuse. A few cases of
non-reporting have been criminally prosecuted, and made known to the child care
professions. The February 20, 2001 minutes of Dufferin CAS show their
efforts to expand the net:
Kim Evans, Program Manager of Intake and After Hours, attended meetings re guidelines that police departments are to follow to report to CAS. These guidelines will result in a significant increase in calls to CAS, ie if there are any children present upon investigating a domestic situation, the police are to call CAS; if a child is not in an approved restraining system (car seat), the police will contact CAS, if police go into a house and don't see appropriate fire detectors they must report to CAS. This means more investigations and follow-ups.
And anyone with a grudge may use a phone call to sic CAS on a personal enemy.
This system gives CAS a rich stream of leads while making parents wary of using
professional services, or even public schools, for their children.
Once tipped off, social workers routinely enter homes of parents, approaching
with smiles. If smiles won't get them into a home, they go through the
inconvenience of getting a warrant and make an armed entry under police escort.
When the children are of school age, they usually take the short-cut of picking
them up at school and placing them in foster care. Parents only find out
when they frantically call police after the children fail to come home.
Social workers can then enter the home under the pretense of evaluation for
reunification.
To get a child into long-term foster care, it is necessary to get a court order.
This is usually a formality since CAS targets families that cannot afford legal
representation. Even for those who do hire counsel, the process is a sham.
There is no testimony, no cross-examination, no discovery, no jury, no rules of
evidence. The material comes on competing affidavits, and no one can be
asked a question that he is required to answer. There is no record made of
the proceedings in the courtroom. Formally, the rules do provide for all
of these things, but in practice the lawyers abridge the process so that they do
not occur. In over a hundred families interviewed, I have found only one
that had a chance to testify, and they wound up in bankruptcy and lost their
children anyway. Here are some of the standard techniques:
- Social workers misrepresent themselves as friends of the family. Parents unaccustomed to hostility from agents of the crown often make the mistake of cooperating with social workers until it is too late.
- Broken promises. Common promises are to leave the family alone in exchange for cooperation in the investigation, then the information gathered becomes the legal basis for apprehension.
- Twisting statements. In an American case, a father told the social worker that he gave his daughter a shower. This got to court as: The father admitted to holding his daughter's head under water.
- Faeces in the home. Sounds terrible. To find faeces in a home, first check the diaper change room. For older children, the catbox will reveal the dreaded faeces.
- Assessments. Social workers fill out risk assessment forms on the family, using them to justify foster care for children when the assessments pass a threshold. A statistical analysis of several filled-out assessments shows proof of bias.
- Home renovations. If any part of a home is under renovation CAS will claim it is a safety hazard.
- Coaching young children. A three-year-old Dufferin girl was coached (through methods not recorded), then induced to say on video-tape that her mother hit her with a frying pan. Mother later found that the girl did not know what a frying pan was.
- In almost all cases social workers will threaten to remove children unless the parents immediately take some action, often as trivial as cleaning the fridge. Aside from power-tripping, I have not found any purpose to these threats.
- Examinations. CAS has a staff of professionals they can depend on to give reports unfavorable to parents. Once children are in custody, CAS takes them to a pediatrician, therapist, psychiatrist or social workers for reports. If there was little case to begin with, there will be a large stack of documents against the parents within a few days.
- As a last resort, CAS looks for bad housekeeping. Socks on the floor, dirty dishes piled in the kitchen, laundry not stacked neatly.
- Opposite accusations. If you examine enough cases you will eventually find instances such as this: One family lost its children for having locks on the interior doors, the same CAS intervened in another family for not having locks on the interior doors.
If you don't have kids, or have not had one of your children kidnapped, you
don't know what this stage is like. Seizure of children at the hands of
the crown produces a distress unlike any other. I encountered the writing
of a tragic mother who experienced both the seizure of a child, and the death of
a child. The seizure was the far worse experience. Marriages often
survive a child death, but rarely survive child seizure. The desperation of
parents allows for unbounded abuse by
social workers from that point on.
A natural question is whether this level of intervention achieves a beneficial
purpose. I spent 9 and a half years in foster homes and boarding schools
myself, and I know what they are really like. Any parent who is not
homicidal is better than many foster parents. In the dozens of interviews
I have conducted with parents, I found only one where the child was better off
in the custody of CAS. In my experience, the number of children in care
exceeds need by a factor of ten everywhere, and fifty in some jurisdictions,
even more in some hot-spots. Janet M Frederick reports that in 1996 half
the children in Clare County Michigan were removed and placed in foster care.
Administration
As Dr Frankenstein assembled body parts from several people to create one
monster, Children's Aid is partly a government agency, partly private.
Each Children's Aid is organized under the Corporations Act as a not-for-profit
charity. The funding comes from the Province of Ontario. The Child
and Family Services Act gives extensive powers to one officer of CAS, called the
local director, or executive director. This Frankenstein structure
sidesteps traditional protections from the police. An example is the right
to remain silent. In police work, silence cannot be held against the
accused, but CAS stigmatizes parents who remain silent. Another is freedom
of information. As a non-government body, they reject all calls for
disclosure, not only to parents, but even to graduates of foster care.
John Dunn, age 31, grew up in Ontario foster care and the only record of his
childhood is the notes kept by social workers, yet they will not let him view
the documents. Still another abrogated right is protection against search
and seizure. In the case of homeschooling parents Jim and Mary Ann Stumbo
of Kings Mountain, the North Carolina Court of Appeals ruled that the family had
no constitutional protection against unreasonable search and seizure by Child
Protective Services because child protectors are not state actors.
Covering up
A network of laws and policies keeps the operation of social services secret.
A simple tool is the law making it an offense to disclose the name of a child
involved in a child protection case. This is construed broadly to apply to
any name from which the child's name could be derived, such as the parent's
name. In practice, the parents rarely object to publication of their
names, most objections come from CAS. Parents who wish to get relief by
publicizing their plight are subject to a banning order similar to South Africa
under apartheid. In a case in which I put a family's story on the internet, CAS
threatened not me, but the mother, with jail if it stayed there. It was
removed.
The social service industry feeds the press with favorable stories. Here
are some of the ones you may have encountered:
- Social workers are overworked. Of course, when a small agency attempts to keep tabs on nearly every family in its jurisdiction, it is overworked. They make no attempt to confine their efforts to cases where they are truly needed.
- The greatest danger to women is from their husbands. Actually, a marriage is the safest institution for a woman to live in.
- Parents are the greatest danger to children. A similar reversal of reality. Anyone with common sense knows knows the terrible damage to a child (or even an animal) caused by removing him from his parents.
- A death occurred in a family already known to social services. If we only had more money and power, say the agencies, we could prevent these tragedies. In various jurisdictions this has produced what Richard Wexler calls a foster care panic. New policies cause social services to take far more children than ever into custody, but this only elevates abuse. What about the opposite situation, where a baby is harmed while in custody of CAS? Ontario held an inquest into the case of Jordan Heikamp, who starved to death in CAS custody. Remarkably, even in this case, a coroners jury returned 44 recommendations all suggesting more money and power for CAS.
Outrages and scandals
In Orangeville, courts handle only one kind of case on any day of the week.
On criminal and civil court days, the courthouse is nearly empty. On
family court days, the parking lot is full, requiring a two block walk from the
nearest space. The corridors are packed with people, and lawyers mill
around incessantly making deals. Family court has become a principal means
of state control over the lives of the people.
I have personally spoken to four women who took shelter in the local women's
shelter, Family Transition Place, and then lost their children to foster care.
Reports from elsewhere suggest this is a widespread practice, and in New York
City it is the subject of a class-action lawsuit, Nicholson v Scopetta.
One of the most extreme developments in social services is the shotgun divorce:
a divorce imposed against the will of both husband and wife. A common
technique is to apprehend children and tell one parent, usually the mother, that
a divorce is required before she can see her children again. Another
starting point is a domestic disturbance call. In these cases, police are
encouraged, and in some jurisdictions required, to make an arrest, no matter
what the circumstances. Once one parent, usually the father, is in jail,
he is required to sign a document forbidding contact with his own family.
Children's Aid will then intervene further, ensuring that the marriage is
destroyed.
In October 2001 Philadelphia social worker Brandon Ware entered the home of a
28-year-old single mother and threatened to remove her children unless she
submitted to sexual intercourse with him. He got what he wanted.
In 1999 Massachusetts DSS removed two children, Kyle and Damien, from their
mother Diana Ross. In June 2001 Kyle Ross was killed by the foster
family's rottweiler. DSS shamelessly took her next child, Aaron, born two
months later, into their custody.
Florida DCF placed 5-year-old Rilya Wilson in the care of her grandmother.
Late in 2000 or early 2001 according to the grandmother, a social worker from
DCF took the child back. For a year after that, her caseworker regularly
filed false reports affirming that she had visited the child. In May 2002
DCF finally realized the child was missing, and she has not been found.
This case opened up a flood of stories in the Florida press about DCF, and
governor Jeb Bush fired the head of the agency Kathleen Kearney (nicknamed the
Terminator, for her habit of terminating parental rights while serving as a
judge), replacing her with Jerry Regier, an advocate of family rights.
Opposition
An examination of the law and the actions of social workers convinced me quickly
that there was no remedy through the courts, only through political action.
Membership in CAS is open to any adult in the jurisdiction upon payment of a
nominal fee. I organized a membership drive and ran candidates opposed to
the incumbents. The result two years later was the adoption of a new bylaw
restricting candidates for director to those nominated by the nominating
committee, composed of incumbent directors. Elections are now like those
in the Soviet Union under communism, with only approved names on the ballot.
A website at www.freespeech.org/herod
has a record of this effort.
In addition to Dufferin, there are three other opposition groups dealing with a
specific CAS, in Halton, Durham and St Thomas/Elgin. These may be the four
worst agencies in Ontario. So far, there is no province-wide opposition
group.
Disrespect for CAS is widespread in the child care industry. I have
encountered many people who freely acknowledge that it is a harmful institution,
yet none will take action to oppose it, since CAS is in a position to destroy
the career of any child care professional who raises his voice in opposition.
The situation brings to mind a line by Martin Luther King, history will not
remember what bad people do, but what good people fail to do.
Robert T McQuaid
Orangeville Ontario
email: rtmq@stn.net