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A boy on a futon in an office. Teens in budget hotels. How Ontario is failing kids who are ‘too complex’ for care

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A boy on a futon in an office. Teens in budget hotels. How Ontario is failing kids who are ‘too complex’ for care

A 10-year-old boy spent most of this year living in an office at the children’s aid society in a small town in southwestern Ontario. For eight months, he slept on a futon in a makeshift bedroom with a sink and a fridge. Paid staff watched over him and brought him meals. School was a room down the hall with a computer for virtual learning.

Child protection workers called 98 live-in treatment centres and group homes to find a placement for the boy, but they all said no: there was no space, or his needs were “too complex.” Instead, the child turned 11 while living in a public building, getting none of the mental health treatment he desperately needed.

Reasons for kids’ health crisis

Money alone won’t solve the problem

‘A lack of privacy, routine, normalcy’

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