Pubdate: Fri, 28 Dec 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Jennifer Saltman SOCIAL WORKERS WORRY ABOUT GROW-OP KIDS Question Criteria Used To Investigate The B.C. Association of Social Workers is calling on the province to show how it deals with children taken from marijuana grow operations. The appeal follows the Dec. 11 removal of three children under the age of 12 from an Abbotsford grow-op that had dangerously high levels of carbon monoxide. The children were put into the care of the Ministry of Children and Family Development. Children were also found in a Richmond home in August after police recovered more than 1,100 plants in the home. Two children, aged two and four, belonging to realtor Tammy Wing Yan Tsui and her husband, Clement Kin Keung, were put into the care of the ministry, along with three children who were visiting. A second grow operation had no one living inside. According to the B.C. Association of Social Workers, there is no way to determine if children from drug houses are being properly protected or if the ministry has provided sufficient guidance to its child-protection social workers. The association wants transparency when it comes to what criteria are applied by social workers conducting commercial grow-op child-protection investigations, and how marijuana grow-op children are kept safe by the child-protection system beyond the initial investigation and response. Association spokesman Paul Jenkinson said vague generalities, such as every situation being "unique," don't build confidence in the child-protection system. Minister of Children and Family Development Tom Christensen was unavailable for comment, but a ministry spokeswoman said there is a clear policy for social workers to follow: the Child, Family and Community Service Act. She said the act gives social workers a broad mandate and there are no plans to change it. "One set of circumstances shouldn't be treated differently from any other," she said. "Front-line workers will determine the risk to the child, based on the situation, and act accordingly to make sure the child is protected. "It's the social worker's obligation to determine if the environment is harmful to the child and determine if the child is in need of protection." The spokeswoman said the ministry receives and responds to more than 30,000 child-protection reports across B.C. in any given year. The ministry doesn't track what kind of situation each child comes from. "They're all unique circumstances, so it would be hard to classify them," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek