Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Phoenix inquiry resumes after legal delay
The inquiry into the death of five-year-old Phoenix Sinclair picks up today where it left off in September.
Witness Andy Orobko, the North Winnipeg Child and Family Services intake supervisor who was both social worker and supervisor on Phoenix's case at one point, is set to continue testifying.
The inquiry is examining how Phoenix's case fell through the cracks of the child welfare system. She was beaten to death in 2005 by her mom, Samantha Kematch, and her mom's boyfriend, Karl McKay, months after social workers removed her from a foster home and gave her back to her mother.
In the first five months of her life, Phoenix had four different social workers. They had five different supervisors.
In September, Orobko told the inquiry staffing levels were so low, it was impossible to meet provincial standards. When his staff was overwhelmed, he "marshalled" files in his office, holding cases until he had the staff to handle them. Sometimes, he took on the files himself, up to 20 cases at one point, when he was supposed to be supervising them, he told the inquiry earlier.
His testimony was cut short three days after the public hearings began when the Manitoba Court of Appeal agreed to hear arguments over whether previous witness interviews should be fully disclosed. Several child welfare authorities fought the decision by inquiry commissioner Ted Hughes to give them only summaries of the commission's pre-inquiry interviews with the 140 or so witnesses who are scheduled to testify. They asked the Manitoba Court of Appeal to grant them the full transcripts -- about 11,000 pages that would have to be reviewed line by line to delete confidential information before they could be released.
Last month, the court refused the request, allowing the inquiry to proceed.
Inquiry counsel Sherri Walsh called that delay "unfortunate" for the many witnesses anxious to testify.
The high court's decision, however, is helping to guide the inquiry and will be useful to other inquiries across Canada, she said.
"I am confident we will now be able to move forward to tell the story of Phoenix and to be in a position ultimately to answer not only what happened, but also how can this tragedy be understood."
The inquiry has also been delayed by challenges from the union representing Manitoba social workers and child welfare agencies. The Manitoba Government and General Employees' Union went to court to try to limit the inquiry from finding fault. It lost that battle. It lost another court battle to grant anonymity to social workers who testify.
In March 2011, the Manitoba government announced Hughes would conduct an inquiry to examine the circumstances surrounding the death. It was to look at the child welfare services provided or not provided to the girl and her family under the Child and Family Services Act, any other circumstances directly related to her death, and why Phoenix's death remained undiscovered for several months.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 14, 2012 A5
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