My name is Dr. Valerie Irvine. I want to thank you very much for inviting me to speak with you today.
I am a professor in the faculty of education at the University of Victoria. I have a Ph.D. in educational psychology from the University of Alberta and bachelor's degrees in both education and English from UBC. I have held Government of Canada Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council funding. I have been an affiliate and received funding from the Human Early Learning Partnership and was previously a research coordinator with the Research and Action for Child Health group at the University of Victoria, focusing on early childhood development.
Although family law is not my area of research as part of my academic position, I am familiar with theories of child development. Some of the family law content overlaps with education, as we also strive to meet the best interests of the child. I hope to bring a fresh perspective to what I see as a stuck system that entrenches families oppositionally in legal structures, creating more risk and harm, especially to those most vulnerable who have experienced family violence.
To give some context, I live within walking distance of two homes—one in which two girls were killed by their father on Christmas Day last year and, before that, one where children, a mother, and her parents were killed by the children's father.
The legal system fails to protect the victims of family violence. There is a lack of support, and the supports, where available, face design flaws. I personally have been engaged in the family law system as a parent for almost 10 years, and my family has been exposed to traumatic experiences before, during, and after divorce. My children have recently accessed the new Child and Youth Legal Centre in B.C. to obtain direct representation for their voice. It was only the involvement of a lawyer for the child that brought a halt to legal proceedings. It reframed the dynamics and ended the continuation of repeated legal proceedings.
I draw from these personal and community experiences, and my background in educational psychology and schools, in making recommendations for amendments to Bill C-78. There are many families who are in situations similar to ours. Most impacted are the children.
Canadian families require more integrated services, such as data analytics, the elevation of the role of a child's direct health professional team, and legal representation for the child. While we criticize the American health system for its cruel design of cost recovery for health access, we have the same approach in family law, and family violence is also life-threatening.
For child survivors, when their voice is channelled through a parent, it can be perceived as muddied by the opposing parent, and fidelity is further weakened since child voice is only one factor and not "the" factor being considered. I am deeply concerned about how a single parent with low income, minimal education, challenges with language or articulation, and no supports for self-care might get through this experience. How can this entire process serve the best interests of the children? How can this be Canadian?
Integrated services are needed to support the child in cases of family violence. What is best for the child is access to and involvement by their own personal, trusted, ongoing health professionals, such as their family doctor, child psychiatrist and counselling psychologist, and their own legal representative. Where there is triangulation from this team, any legal action should be prohibited.
It is interesting to note that the shifts that actually materialized in our parenting time, despite all the legal costs, were made not by lawyers but by the children acting out after buildup and refusal to go for their custody transition time, which created times of crisis. If only their voice had been listened to earlier on, as supported by their health professionals, adaptations could have been made without distress. I need to ask the government why legal engagement is necessary. If the voice of the child was elevated, prioritized and determined to be sound by their own health professionals and lawyer, little of this legal escalation would happen.
When $20,000, $50,000, or $100,000 has been invested into the creation of a court order, often at the financial ruination of families, the threat of legal engagement becomes so ominous that children's rights to change parenting configurations are impinged upon. The involvement of family health professionals can defuse these risks.
It is important to note that prioritizing preferences for parenting time does not need to be forever decision, unlike the presentation of court orders. This fluidity would dissolve the high stakes of seemingly permanent and financially invested court orders. It should motivate parents to be more focused on gaining child trust and building relationships, as opposed to building a case.
I hypothesize that the sharp increase in child anxiety disorders in schools, now at 20%, or one in five, which creates significant disruptions for the education sector, is linked to family violence in shared-parenting households. Shared-parenting households have increased from approximately 13% in 1995 to 70% in 2016, as per the Government of Canada's Department of Justice and Statistics Canada.
Legislation must occur that requires judges to lean toward making type 1 errors, which is the incorrect assumption that family violence, or risk that it will occur, is present when it actually has not occurred or will not occur, as opposed to type 2 errors, which is the incorrect assumption that family violence has not occurred or is not likely to occur, when it did occur and will occur subsequent to judgment.
The judge in the Berry case in B.C., a.k.a. the “Christmas case”, where two girls were murdered, is a type 2 error. The consequences of type 2 errors are serious to deadly. The consequences of type 1 errors are not as serious and are more likely to result in peace and safety for the child. If we want to seek a system that values the best interests of the child systematically, then evidence-based, system-wide decisions should seek to reduce type 2 errors and increase type 1 errors in risk assessment and judgments. This requires collection and analysis of data from courts involving family law with periodic follow-up, proper education for lawyers and judges with regard to family violence, and direct child legal representation.
Of concern is also the encroachment of privately funded psychologists and privately funded lawyers into the world of the child, which represents a conflict of interest, as they are paid by engagement and not by outcome. Existing government-appointed medical and mental health practitioners who directly care for the child, and government-funded lawyers who directly represent the child, would remove this conflict of interest and should be prioritized over the corporatization of child welfare in divorce.
We have private third party psychologists now forming expensive corporate programs, espousing predetermined outcomes and promoting questionable psychological frameworks criticized for their gender bias and narrow conceptualization that do not apply to the bulk of the population. These are becoming popular in courts and cost almost as much as court. These programs are even striving to override the voice of the child—whom they've never met—and their health professional team, when they have zero understanding of the situation they're entering, which may include children at risk. A child's voice and the opinion of their health professional team should take precedence over these private psychologist companies.
My brief includes a number of detailed and further amendments that could make dramatic shifts to support children's best interests. Note that it is empowering for children to know that they have voice. Children of abuse especially have had their power taken from them. In many cases, they act out when someone asserts power over them again. To re-establish their voice after abuse is a huge step toward child honouring.
Thank you.