All posts in Blog

  • January 14, 2016

    Dear Members and Friends of FamilyNet:

    Welcome! Here is our Updated Website.
    We are happy to introduce our re-newed and re-vitalized website for FamilyNet
    members, advocates, family members and anyone interested in a better life for individuals with developmental disabilities and their families.

    The Goals of FamilyNet
    The goal of FamilyNet is to be a provincial voice for children and youth with disabilities,
    and adults with developmental disabilities and their family and friends. Based on what
    we hear from you, and what we experience ourselves, we present issues and concerns
    to Community Living BC, the Ministry of Social Development and other ministries as
    needed.

    Our intent, always, is to be problem-solvers, working to help make things better.

    We Need Your Stories
    Thus we encourage you to provide feedback via this website so that we can identify ineffective policies and suggest new ways of doing things.

    Senior Parent Concerns
    A major goal over the past few years has been to highlight the plight of senior parents
    and their concerns for their sons and daughters in the future. We have worked to
    ensure that decision makers and government are aware of these issues.

    Safeguards are Essential
    Adequate safeguards and monitoring are essential in community living. We know that
    for true community inclusion, our sons, daughters and family members need some paid
    support. But we also know that the friends and family around them will help improve
    their lives and keep them safe.

    Recommendations to CLBC and Government
    Some of our concerns over the past few years have led to the following
    recommendations to CLBC and to the Minister of Social Development:

    • Increase the number of family members and self-advocates on the CLBC Board
    • Institute a multi-layered approach to safeguarding and monitoring individuals
    • Integrate the roles of facilitators, analyst, and navigator to alleviate this rather
      complex and uncoordinated planning/funding system
    • Create an advisory process that welcomes input from family members and provides
      feedback on issues raised
    • Recognize and continue to maintain a range of residential options that will best
      serve people in varying stages of independence over their lives
    • Work collaboratively with other ministries to ensure smooth transitions from
      children’s services to adult supports.

    Our work at FamilyNet is on-going, and we look forward to hearing your stories and
    insights.

    With Best Wishes,

    Linda Derkach, President
    BC Family Net Society
    January 2016

  • August 17, 2010 – Family Net News Update

    August 17, 2010

    BC Family Net Society is pleased that our revised website is now up and running. We wish to thank Jar Design of Richmond who graciously offered to update and redesign our site. Please check regularly for updates. As our history notes we started this Society back in 1995 to provide a voice for parents due to serious changes being contemplated for service delivery on behalf of people with developmental disabilities.

    We have seen many changes since that time culminating with the establishment of Community Living BC some five years ago. We are now at another crossroad where our movement is witnessing more changes due in part to budget constraints and an ever changing philosophy regarding how services can be still effective while costing considerably less. While families have always been willing to assist in ensuring that their loved ones get the best possible help we are fearful that the cutbacks and new delivery designs will have profound implications on those we strive to protect.

    Our commitment as family, self-advocates and friends is to ensure that these changes are not detrimental and we strive to continue to advocate on behalf of those we love.

    Anita Dadson, President, Family Net Society

  • July 25, 2008 – FamilyNet News

    July 25, 2008

    B.C. Family Net Society joins others in its outrage at the latest move by the B.C. Liberal Government, without any prior consultation, to restrict Community Living B.C.’s (CLBC) service to persons with an I.Q. of 70 or less. We are deeply concerned about the impact on vulnerable individuals and families. This decision comes on the heels of the recent unilateral decision regarding services to children, youth and adults with developmental disabilities to move to a different Ministry. These actions add to Family Net’s dismay at how this government has betrayed its earlier commitment to transparent decision making and open consultation. We are preparing an open letter to the Premier as well as pursuing other strategies to address this eligibility issue and others. The letter will be posted on this website by the end of next week.

  • FamilyNet News Update – November 2006

    BC FamilyNet Society News Update
    November 2006 (Download PDF)

    To Our Members and Supporters
    From the Board of Directors

    It’s been a busy fall for BC FamilyNet, so far, with a series of initiatives to address concerns in community living. Here’s a brief summary:

    1. Meetings and Presentations

    ince August, BC FamilyNet representatives have met with the new MCFD Opposition Critic, Maurine Karagianis, with the CLBC Board and senior management, and with the new MCFD Minister, Tom Christensen, to brief them on issues and concerns in community living and to offer our support in resolving them. We are also still trying to schedule a meeting with the new MCFD Deputy Minister, Leslie du Toit. Minister Christensen appeared receptive to our concerns when we met with him in early October, but we are still awaiting his response to the issues we raised, as outlined in documents referenced below, and posted on our website (http://www.bcfamilynet.org/)

    In September, BC FamilyNet was one of several groups from the community living sector that appeared before the Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services in Vancouver, to make a presentation on the need for more funding to support adults with developmental disabilities, children and youth with special needs and their families

    2. Key Issues in Community Living
    This document (at our above web link) sums up key current issues in community living, as brought to our attention by families and others. We began with a draft document in August, which we refined based on community feedback and answers provided during a meeting with the CLBC Board and senior management in September. We also grouped these issues under three over-arching themes: under-funding, the need for a clear mandate in community living, and problems related to organizational change. As the implementation of the new CLBC model continues to unfold, new issues may arise and/or others may be resolved, so we will update this document periodically, as necessary.

    3. Questions about Group Home Review

    Given the previous MCFD Minister’s role in commissioning and allocating a special budget for this review, we compiled the concerns being heard from families and others and brought them to Minister Christensen’s attention at our meeting. We urged him to look into these concerns (BCFN Group Home Review F.pdf) and are awaiting his response. BC FamilyNet had also previously discussed the concerns with the CLBC leadership, and as a result a Question and Answer response has been posted on their website. At this date, we hear that the project is well underway. The Review team has been contacting group home operators/agencies to make arrangements to meet with individuals and families. CLBC expected service providers to first identify and provide profiles on individuals and families who might be interested in exploring a residential alternative. We understand this plan was not well received. Some associations have chosen to invite the CLBC Residential Options Project coordinators to a town hall style meeting to make a presentation to families and self-advocates and respond to questions and concerns that are brought forward. CLBC has recently announced that transformation grants up to a maximum of $50,000 will be made available to service providers who wish to develop a broader array of residential alternatives for individuals or groups of individuals moving from group homes to other residential options. Also, a Service Accountability & Safeguards work plan has been developed, as well as a draft Standards for Home Living Services for Adults for unlicensed and unaccredited homes. One standard proposed by CLBC is a ratio of only1 residentialunlicensed and unaccredited homes. One standard proposed by CLBC is a ratio of only1 residential coordinator per 35 (approx.) individuals, and for respite services, one service coordinator per 50 (approx.) individuals.

    4. Budget Brief

    BC FamilyNet presented a comprehensive provincial budget brief on challenges linked to under-funding of community living and other services for adults with developmental disabilities, children with special needs and their families. We provided a copy to the new MCFD Minister, and urged his immediate intervention with at least $58 million in new funding from the current year’s provincial fiscal surplus to immediately begin addressing the waitlists of over 3,000 adults awaiting CLBC services. We were also encouraged to see many other organizations and individuals from our sector submitting briefs of their own during provincial pre-budget consultations.
    Other initiatives

    This past year BC FamilyNet has also directly or indirectly supported other advocacy initiatives, including:

    • We Survived Woodlands Group’s campaign, “Do the Right Thing: Government restitution for former vresidents of Woodlands School.
    • Coalition of handyDART Users proposal: Making HandyDART a Translink Subsidiary
    • Provincial Special Education Coalition to address concerns about Bill 33 introduced in April, setting a limit of three special needs students to a classroom.
    • Campaign by The Community Coalition for the Implementation of Adult Guardianship Legislation to keep the Representation Agreement Act as British Columbia’s ONLY legal tool for advance care planning (instructions for health and personal care).
    • BC FamilyNet letter to CLBC recommending involvement of self-advocates in selection process for CLBC self-advocate advisor position, which resulted in a self-advocate being added to the selection committee.
    • BC FamilyNet Submission to Ted Hughes BC Children & Youth Review (Independent Review of BC’s Child Protection System)
    • Online petition not to implement Education Ministry Policy going into effect in 2007 that would stop issuing school completion certificates (Dogwood certificates) for students with special needs who meet their Individual Education Plan
    • BC FamilyNet hosted a booth at Autism Fair in Ladner

    Other News & Events

    January 13, 2006: Our name was changed – You may have noticed a slight change in our name this past year – we have added the word “Society”. In fact our organization was incorporated as a nonprofit Society in 1995 under the name, BC Federation of Families Society. Over the years we have become better known as FamilyNet and more recently, BC FamilyNet. We were successful in applying for a name change following a resolution passed at our AGM last Fall, and are now officially named BC FamilyNet Society.

    Nov. 9: Child and Youth Advocate, Jane Morley released special report and recommendations: A Bridge to Adulthood: Maximizing the Independence of Youth in Care with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum”. Morley’s recommendations include expanding CLBC’s eligibility criteria to include individuals with IQ’s over 70. This would have broader implications regarding the budget and new CLBC service model, as it would apply to others who have developmental disabilities, including autism, if implemented by government.

    November 21: New Federal autism research chair announced by the Federal government to look at effective treatments and interventions for autism. Other measures include an autism surveillance program to shape research; a stakeholder symposium in 2007, and a new web page on autism on Health Canada’s website. Nov. 22: New child and youth representative – Saskatchewan Provincial Court Judge Mary Ellen TurpelLafond has been selected for this position.