Child Protection & Social Services

Tracking systemic failures and advocating for reform

🚨 The Crisis:

Nova Scotia's child protection system is at a breaking point. Social workers report excessive caseloads, inadequate resources, chronic understaffing, and lack of training leading to burnout and missed interventions.

Key Issues:

• Overburdened Workers: Current caseloads far exceed recommended standards, leaving workers unable to provide meaningful support to families in crisis

• Indigenous Children Overrepresented: Indigenous children remain disproportionately removed from their communities despite calls for reform

• System Prioritizes Monitoring Over Support: The current approach focuses on watching families rather than providing actual resources and assistance

• Rising Child Poverty: Child and family poverty rates in Nova Scotia continue to climb while provincial budgets lack meaningful investments in affordable housing, universal childcare, and mental health supports

📊 What Needs to Change:

1. Public Inquiry: Advocates call for a comprehensive public inquiry after multiple cases where children and families were harmed due to systemic failures

2. Adequate Funding: Increased investment in social services, mental health care, and poverty reduction programs

3. Training & Support: Better training for social workers and reduced caseloads to allow for quality interventions

4. True Child Advocate: Establishment of a genuinely independent child and youth advocate office with real power to investigate and recommend changes

🔗 Resources:

• Nova Scotia Association of Social Workers
• Child Welfare League of Canada
• Community advocates and support organizations