B.C. has a protocol for interprovincial information sharing when an at-risk child moves out of the province, but B.C.’s child representative said that cross-border sharing didn’t happen in the case of a 15-year-old boy who died of neglect in Alberta.
Alex weighed 37 pounds and was severely malnourished when, in May 2013, he was taken to hospital where he died from sepsis and untreated diabetes. His parents, Emil and Rodica Radita, were found guilty in 2017 of first-degree murder. The family moved to Alberta in 2008. The boy’s case file in B.C. had been closed, so child welfare officials in Alberta were unaware that he was potentially in danger.
B.C. now has a provincial-territorial protocol that includes “child action alerts,” she said. That means front-line workers in B.C. are required to gather and disclose information any time there’s concerns about the safety and well-being of a child who has moved outside of B.C. Charlesworth said many of the improvements in interprovincial information sharing followed a report she wrote in 2019 called Caught in the Middle which examined the overdose death of a teen who had been in contact with child-welfare systems in B.C. and Alberta.
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