“we’ve used it successfully twice, and both cases a newborn was left at grey nuns,” says self. “both instances the newborn was healthy, so it was a positive outcome. initially we said if it was never used that’s fine. our goal is to mitigate abandonment, but we know it does occur.”
self says $80,000 grant money paid for the launch of the program, and running it is part of normal operational expenses. some of the budget went to advertising, with posters placed in women’s washrooms across downtown edmonton, lrt stations, university campuses and some restaurants and bars. “we wanted it to be known,” he says.
will mother and child ever meet again?
cundiff says that, while no one’s hunting down the parent who left the baby (unless the baby shows signs of harm, then the police get involved), the ministry of child and family development does make an effort, through advertising, to find the mother and reunite her with the baby in case it was an impulsive, regrettable decision.
“we know very little about women who abandon babies and what their motivations are,” he says. “clearly, if anonymity is so important, there must be an issue of their safety versus the baby’s safety. there could be all sorts of scenarios — an abusive relationship, a young girl who could be abandoned by her family if she’s pregnant, an immigrant who’s afraid to be deported.”