B.C. children's rep wins court decision - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. children's rep wins court decision

A B.C. court has ordered the provincial government to provide cabinet documents to the province's children's advocate, saying Premier Gordon Campbell and his minister failed in their duties.

A B.C. court has ordered the provincial government to provide cabinet documents to the province's children's advocate, saying Premier Gordon Campbell and his minister failed in their duties.

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond argued inB.C. Supreme Court that the provincial Liberals were restricting her efforts on behalf of children by denying her access to cabinet documents.

Her lawsuit named Campbell and Children's Minister Mary Polak, though neither appeared in court. Turpel-Lafond did not testify in the case.

Before initiating the lawsuit, the government had asked Turpel-Lafond to sign a protocol agreement that would have permitted her to view the documents, but gave the government control over their use.

The cabinet documents Turpel-Lafond sought were related to the government'sChildren in the Home of a Relative program.

Judge Susan Griffin ordered the documents be handed over to Turpel-Lafond's lawyer immediately Friday, right in the courtroom.

Turpel-Lafond's lawyer arguedshe was legally entitled to the documents, and needed them to complete her audit, but the government read the law differently. In court,government lawyer George Copley argued only the cabinet has discretion over cabinet documents.

Combative reputation

Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs Grand Chief Stewart Phillip was in court Thursday to show his support for Turpel-Lafond's efforts to investigate the government program involving thousands of children and youth who live with relatives.

Phillip said he supportedTurpel-Lafond havingaccess to the documents if itcould better protect the 10,000 children in government care, half of whom are aboriginal.

"She enjoys widespread support in the aboriginal community. We have passed resolutions supporting her work, her mandate," said Phillip.

In three years on the job, Turpel-Lafondhas earned a reputation as an outspoken andcombative children's representative, frequently criticizing the government for not responding to her recommendations.

The Liberals introduced legislation last month to amend the Representative for Children and Youth Act saying it wouldensure cabinet confidentiality is protected.

Turpel-Lafond has said the proposed legislation would deter her from assessing how top levels of government are doing when it comes to protecting children by muzzling her ability to fully examine cabinet documents and make recommendations on how things can be improved.

With files from The Canadian Press