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Ottawa police seek help locating missing man, 81

Ottawa police seek help locating missing man, 81

CTV News4 days ago
Winston Reid, 81, was last seen Aug. 12, 2025, in the Eagleson Road and Stonehaven Drive area of Kanata. (Ottawa Police Service/handout)
The Ottawa Police Service is asking for the public's help in locating a missing 81-year-old man.
Winston Reid was last seen Tuesday on Eagleson Road near Stonehaven Drive in Kanata. Police say there are concerns about his wellbeing.
Reid is described as a Black man, 6-foot-1, with a large build, short salt-and-pepper hair and a salt-and-pepper beard.
Anyone with information about Reid's whereabouts is asked to contact Ottawa police at 613-236-1222 ext. 7300.
Anonymous tips can be submitted by calling Crime Stoppers toll-free at 1-800-222-8477(TIPS).
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Quebec youth protection revamp: DPJ director says ‘society' is biggest hurdle
Quebec youth protection revamp: DPJ director says ‘society' is biggest hurdle

CTV News

time21 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Quebec youth protection revamp: DPJ director says ‘society' is biggest hurdle

After numerous controversies and scandals, Quebec officials acknowledge that the province's youth protection system (DPJ) needs a major overhaul. In an interview with CTV News, Director Lesley Hill insists now's the time to overthrow the status quo. Hill assumed the department's portfolio in October 2024 after serving on the Laurent Commission, which examined the shortcomings of the DPJ after the tragic death of a seven-year-old girl in Granby in 2019. Cases like that of the little girl, she explains, are why she wants to make drastic changes for children across Quebec. READ MORE: Reports of children in youth protection exposed to domestic violence has doubled in 10 years Her first step: curbing the high number of runaways in the province's youth centres. How? By giving them more freedom, a move rooted in a type of reverse psychology. 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The method – a completely different clinical model called the self-determination model – was first tested by a unit at an eastern Montreal centre with the CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal: 'We're going to be accompanying you, but you're going to make your own decisions.' ''Is this really real, that they're not shutting the door anymore, that I can go in and out and do what I want?'' she said of the response, adding that the teens were swift to act. 'We saw our runaways just go up through the roof for about two, three months.' Eventually, Hill says, the teens all came back, and feedback from all sides was resoundingly positive. 'The educators realized that they're doing real supporting of young people, real coaching, so they acquire the independence necessary to fend for themselves,' said Hill. 'The young people's satisfaction in the services went through the roof as well.' 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'It's really, really hard. They don't know anything because they haven't been given the opportunity to try it.' teenagers A file photo of teenagers. (George Pak/ The stats Hill explains that a child is considered a 'runaway' once they've been unreported for an hour. Most of the kids, she explains – 75 per cent – come back within eight hours. 'If we want them to be independent, autonomous, be able to make good choices for themselves, we need to be able to let them experience certain things,' said Hill. 'Maybe even go through certain situations where we're more supporting, accompanying, and trying to understand what happened to them, but always, always making sure that they're as safe as possible.' Others – the remaining 25 per cent – can be gone for multiple days. Numbers provided to CTV News by Montreal police (SPVM) show that the number of teen disappearances (13 to 17 years old), including runaways, in the province has remained relatively steady in recent years: Year Total disappearances 2018 1,628 2019 1,588 2020 1,134 2021 1,037 2022 1,298 2023 1,411 2024 (Jan. 1 to March 31) 313 *Complete data for 2024 and the first half of 2025 is not yet available. 'The SPVM receives an average of more than 3,000 reports of missing persons (including runaways) each year, with this number rising to 3,773 in 2023,' the force tells CTV News. 'Around half of all missing persons are found within 24 hours.' Additionally, in the DPJ's annual report, released in June, the department recorded 141,622 safety checks for 105,675 children across Quebec, an increase of five per cent. Last year, the department recorded 141,622 reports for 105,675 children across Quebec, an increase of five per cent. 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Other issues include the Quebec government putting a branch of the province's youth protection office under trusteeship following a report that showed dozens of violations of children's rights, as well as claims that educators at a detention centre for youth in Montreal had sexual relations with minors, resulting in the birth of one child. teenagers A file photo of teenagers. (cottonbro studio/ A 'risk-averse' strategy The province's current 'risk-averse' strategy, says Hill, comes from a place of fear. You can lock a child in a room, she explains, and they'll be physically safe, but the psychological harm could outweigh any good. 'Often, security takes a very large space – and it's OK. We want our children to be secure,' Hill tells CTV News. 'But we also need to let them experience certain things, develop their capacity, their autonomy, and that means managing risk.' Hill says changing the department's best practices shouldn't cost much in terms of money. 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CBC

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Edmonton Amber Alert ends after 2-year-old found, incident believed to be non-criminal
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CBC

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Edmonton Amber Alert ends after 2-year-old found, incident believed to be non-criminal

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