Actually, I did more than toy with the idea; I began keeping track of those type of cases when they crossed my desk and started actively searching for ones from other provinces. In fact, I may still have that research around here somewhere although I would most likely be hard pressed to find it now.
Obviously, I never did get to that blawg post. Mainly because it became clear that the issue was huge and it was going to take no small amount of research and writing to put something together. And I was, in all fairness. rather occupied with other things at the time.
But the issue still fascinates (and disturbs) me from both a legal and parental point of view.
The test in such a situation is always (supposedly) the "best interests" of the child. Parents do not have a right to parent their children. Rather, children have the same basic rights and fundamental freedoms as adults and the additional right "to special safeguards and assistance in the preservation" of their rights and freedoms. And the presumption is that a child's needs will be best met in the care of his or her own family.
But a presumption is not a certainty. Thus, parents are given legal "responsibility for the care and supervision of their children" and children are only to be removed from that supervision "when all other measures are inappropriate".
So at what point does it actually become the case that parents, due to their disability, cannot properly care for their child? And is it possible that children would ever be taken away from their parents due to some form of systemic discrimination against persons with disabilities?
But then again, can it even be that simple?
There are physical disabilities and there are intellectual disabilities. And there are individuals who have both. And, of course, most importantly, each case
All of which takes me to this report out of the US setting out the following issue:
A federal agency is warning the White House that more protections are needed to ensure the parental rights of those with disabilities.The key, of course, is found in that last paragraph.
Even as an increasing number of Americans with special needs choose to become parents, laws across the country routinely undermine their rights, according to a National Council on Disability report which was sent to President Barack Obama on Thursday.
In two-thirds of states, courts are allowed to deem a parent unfit solely based on their disability. And, disability can legally be taken into account in every state when assessing what’s in the best interest of a child, the council found.
In two-thirds of states, courts are allowed to deem a parent unfit solely based on their disability. And, disability can legally be taken into account in every state when assessing what’s in the best interest of a child, the council found.I have no issue with the second sentence - that "disability can legally be taken into account in every state when assessing what’s in the best interest of a child".
But it's one thing to take disability into account (just as you would take into account other factors, such as the support available to a family or parenting style) and completely another to disqualify a person from parenting their own child just because they have a disability. That, I would submit (and I'm sure you would agree) smacks of discrimination.
Apparently the National Council on Disability agrees. And the numbers are staggering.
Currently, some 6.1 million children in the United States have parents with disabilities. They are significantly more likely than other kids to be forcibly separated from their parents, the federal agency found.Although I'm not aware of any Canadian province providing that the courts are allowed to deem a parent unfit solely based on their disability, I have a hunch that the situation is not that different in this country, albeit on a somewhat smaller scale. And although it would be really interesting to see the numbers for Canada, to the best of my knowledge, no one is actually paying attention. Or, at least, no one is compiling those statistics.
Estimates suggest that among parents with intellectual disabilities, removal rates are as high as 80 percent. Similarly high rates are seen among parents with psychiatric disabilities.
Meanwhile, the council found that people with special needs are more likely to lose custody of their children after divorce and have more difficulty adopting kids.
In the US, the National Council on Disability is recommending that new laws be implemented to protect the rights of parents with disabilities and that social services agencies work to better understand and accommodate parents with special needs.
Does that sound like too much to ask?
1 comment:
Very well written and insightful. I love your blog
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