lil angel15
Bluelight Crew
Drug addicts may lose kids
Adam Gartrell and Martin Philip
July 23, 2007 12:00am
CHILDREN of drug addicts would be removed from their parents and adopted out under a dramatic plan being promoted by a high-profile Howard Government MP.
Bronwyn Bishop argues the current system is skewed towards the interests of drug-using parents rather than the best interests of their children.
"We hear the mantra everything is done in the interest of the child, but evidence I've taken in, not only the inquiry I'm doing but other inquiries, show that lip service is paid to that but it's not in the interest of the child," Ms Bishop said.
Ms Bishop, who is chairing a parliamentary inquiry into the impact of illicit drug use and families, has told the ABC she wants to see better opportunities for the children of drug addicts to be adopted.
"There are hundreds and hundreds of parents who are desperate to adopt children and give love and give good homes, but there is this biology-first principle," she said.
But Brisbane Youth Service spokeswoman Amanda Davies rejected Ms Bishop's comments, saying individual cases should be decided on their merits.
"What evidence is there to suggest that all people that use drugs are unable to parent their children?" Ms Davies said.
"It's a universal generalisation based on moral grounds, not actually based on evidence." "I disagree that you can make legalisation based on moral grounds.
"There is no evidence to support the suggestion that people who are drug addicted cannot parent their children.
"It's a moral assumption rather than an evidence-based one and I would suggest that each case needs to be assessed on its own merits, rather than making general rules based on assumptions about drug-dependence."
Queensland Council of Social Service president Karyn Walsh said children of drug-addicted parents should only be adopted out as a last resort.
"You can't just go removing children simply because their parents have a drug addiction," she said. "Children need to know their parents, and not all parents who have a drug addiction are bad parents, or incapable of parenting."
Ms Walsh said there was strong evidence forced removals caused children long-term harm. Greater investment in family support programs was needed to enable authorities to monitor the children of alcoholics.
Victorian Child Safety Commissioner Bernie Geary urged caution, saying a parent's drug use need not lead to a permanent family break-up.
"There is nothing in my experience worse than a child who's sentenced to be without their parents for the rest of their lives," said Mr Geary.
"Children are better off with families in the long run."
Courier Mail


