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Ontario autism services waitlist grew to 27,600 children in 2019-2020: FAO

Ontario's fiscal watchdog says the waitlist for child autism services in the province grew to 27,600 children last year. The Financial Accountability Officer (FAO) says the increase came as the province shifted funding for behavioural therapy programs.

Increase comes as province shifted funding for behavioural therapy programs, FAO says

Last year, hundreds of parents took to Queen's Park to protest the province's plans for autism services. On Tuesday, Ontario's Financial Accountability Officer announced the waitlist for child autism services in the province grew to 27,600 children last year. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The waitlist for autism services in the province grew to 27,600 children last year according to a new report from Ontario's fiscal watchdog, as opposition critics slammed Premier Doug Ford's government for failing to provide needed help to families.

The report from Financial Accountability Officer Peter Weltman released Tuesday said the increase came as the province shifted funding for behavioural therapy programs in 2019-2020.

 Weltman's report examines three different options ahead of the government's planned 2021 program launch. Providing the estimated 42,000 autistic children in the province with service will cost more than double the $600 million currently budgeted, he said.

"You're still going to have a significant waiting list, but it's not as high as it was before," Weltman said of the $600 million in funding. "If you as an MPP think, 'Well, no, we really should clear the waitlist completely,' then our report says, 'OK, but that's going to cost about $1.35 billion in Year 1."

A needs-based program

Therapy for some autistic children can cost as much as $95,000 a year. Last year, Ford's government changed the way it pays for treatment in a bid to eliminate waitlists. The measures reduced the average amount paid to families.

Following a backlash, the government announced last year it would create a needs-based program starting in 2021.

Weltman said even with the $600 million budgeted for the program — which would provide an average child with $29,900 annually for therapy — waitlists would fall by more than 4,000 but still leave about 23,000 children in limbo.

The report also found inflation and increasing need will drive the cost of the program up by $24 million a year, requiring Ontario to pay $96 million more by 2025-2026 to sustain service levels.

Social Services Minister Todd Smith said more than 22,000 children are receiving support through existing government programs and one-time funding.

"We are determined to get this right and will continue to support children and youth during the transition to the new needs-based Ontario Autism Program," he said in a statement.

A growing waitlist

Liberal legislator Michael Coteau, who was social services minister when the previous Liberal government created a needs-based program, said the report shows the Ford government is leaving families behind.

"The government cut funding to parents, left them to fend for themselves, and never once took into account the capacity of the system and whether or not people would even be able to get service," he said.

It is just tragic and it is absolutely horrific that this government has done such a bad job.- NDP Leader Andrea Horwath

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the growing waitlist shows the government is failing families with autistic children.

"Over 27,600 children with autism in our province are not getting the needs-based services that they need and that they deserve," she said. "It is just tragic and it is absolutely horrific that this government has done such a bad job."