For the past 2 years, the cost of kids in care has jumped by millions. Why? - Action News
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NLCBC Investigates

For the past 2 years, the cost of kids in care has jumped by millions. Why?

For the last two years, the province has spent significantly more than planned on kids in care, because more of them have complex needs and mental health issues.

$11M jump over initial estimates in 2017, $15M this past year

There is a trend of children and youth in Newfoundland and Labrador needing more and more complex care within the child welfare system. (Costea Andrea M/Shutterstock)

For two years in a row, the provincial government has been surprised by the needs of some of its most vulnerable citizens.

When the cost ofkids in care went up $10.8 million from nearly $60 million budgeted for2017, Minister of Children, Seniors and Social Development Lisa Dempstersaid it was for one reason.

"The increased cost is directly attributable to the growth in the number of Level 4 placements as a result of an increase in the number of children with complex needs requiring care," she told a legislative committee meeting in April 2018.

"It is the more costly placement option," Dempster explained.

"I guess, when we look at society in general and we look at things like an increase in mental health, addictions, lots of complex things, we're seeing larger sibling groups that we can't place into foster care," she continued.

Lisa Dempster is the minister responsible for children, seniors and social development, which oversees the child and youth welfare system. (John Pike/CBC)

Level 4 is the most critical in the department's qualification system to match the province's children and youthwith the type of care they need, when they cannot stay at home.

It'sfor kids who "cannot be supported in a family-based environment," but require staffedgroup homes mostly run by two private companies that may be outside their home communities.

Another form of Level 4 care is "individual living arrangements," for those who will fare best alone, with employees rotating through.

These are young people with complex mental health, social, emotional, developmental, behaviouralor medical needs who require a special kind of support.

And there are more of them in a province with an aging population. As of Sept. 30, 2018, there were 155 Level 4s, out of roughly 1,000 kids in care.

Another year, another spike in crises

The province did not expect that spike in the amount spent in 2017 to happen again.

But it did.

In fact, it jumped by even moremoney.

The 2019 budget estimates released earlier this monthindicatethe department spent more than $15 million above what it had budgeted for the 2018 fiscal year, totaling over $73 million almost$5 million higher than the year before.

This coming year, it plans to spend nearly $63 million, or roughly half of its total child and youth services budget.

In an email, the department said last year's spike is "related to significant growth in costs of children and youth in care during the last four years," and that it's working to reverse the Level 4 "trend increase."

New legislation coming into effect in June is part of that.

Sheldon Pollett, executive director of Choices for Youth, says increased spending in the child welfare system is indicative of the overall trend of complex mental health and addictions issues in the province. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

A 'trend' indeed

At Choices for Youth in downtown St. John's, executive director Sheldon Pollett says it's time for more planning to tackle thetrend.

They're seeinga recent spike in 16-year-olds showing up at their emergency shelter, and an ever-growing number of young people with complex needs more than 1,500 this year alone, from all over the province going to them for help.

"Between 60 and 70 per cent of the young people that we work with have had some form of contact or experience with the child welfare system," said Pollett, adding they often age out of that system into income support and the criminal justice system.

It is not shocking to see what transpires early on in an individual's life and how it can continue to play out for many years.- Sheldon Pollett

"If you looked at this trend around mental health, addictions, family breakdown, vulnerability, the connection to poverty, connection to the dropout rate in schools," it's obvious things need to change.

Pollett said prevention is key early on, to keep those kids from ever reaching crisis point whichcomes with long-term social and financial costs. He's optimistic the new legislation will help.

"We know if you're a vulnerable, at-risk homeless young person you are at higher risk for just about every awful statistic that we can think," said Pollett.

"It is not shocking to see what transpires early on in an individual's life and how it can continue to play out for many years."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador