Posted: Apr 16, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: April 16
Stanley Hemming, 61, waits every week to find out if his hotel stay will be renewed.(Steve Lawrence/CBC)
Evicted from his Halifax apartment on March 31 for rental arrears, Stanley Hemming packed a few changes of clothes, some essential paperwork and little else.
He went to the hospital, in part because as a diabetic, he knew his blood sugar was dangerously high. But in equal part, he hoped to be admitted just so he would have a place to sleep that night.
Hemming, 61, wasn t admitted to hospital that day, but to his relief, he was offered a bed elsewhere. Staff with the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services placed Hemming in a hotel room, where he s been living ever since.
Posted: Feb 08, 2021 7:30 AM AT | Last Updated: February 8
There were 100 birth alerts issued in 2018-2019 and 95 in 2019-2020, according to the Department of Community Services.(CBC News)
Nova Scotia is one of the last provinces to still use a controversial practice known as birth alerts that has been widely condemned for targeting Indigenous and other racialized women.
A birth alert is when child welfare services notifies a hospital that they believe an expectant mother is high risk and that a newborn baby may need protection. It can lead to the baby being seized without the mother s consent. I have seen young families torn apart, and it has taken years and years and years to get back their children and sometimes they never do, Pam Glode-Desrochers, executive director of the Mi kmaw Native Friendship Centre, told CBC s