FILE A COMPLAINT AGAINST THE DPJ

Abusive intervention, failure to respect the rights of a child in care, contested placement, unjustified decision by a caseworker — three free recourses are available to file a complaint against the DPJ depending on your situation.

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Do you feel powerless before the DPJ? Do you believe a caseworker acted abusively toward your child? Does a decision seem unjustified, or have your rights as a parent not been respected? Are your child's rights not being respected in a foster family or rehabilitation centre? You have free and confidential recourses to make your voice heard.

This guide explains the difference between the three possible bodies, how to identify the right one for your situation, draft your complaint with the help of AI, and submit it — in four simple steps.

⚠ Read this first

This page is NOT for reporting a child in danger. If you believe a child is the victim of abuse, neglect, or is in a situation that compromises their safety or development, you must make a report directly to the DPJ in your region.

This page is for people who want to file a complaint AGAINST the DPJ — because the organization, a caseworker or an institution committed a fault, violated a child's rights, or provided inadequate quality of service.

Grounds for complaint

When to file a complaint — the most common grounds

Several situations can justify a complaint against the DPJ or against the services provided to a child in care. Here are the most common grounds.

Abusive or unjustified intervention

Removal of a child without sufficient grounds, sloppy assessment, pressure on the parent to sign agreements, failure to respect the presumption in favour of parents, absence of alternatives to placement.

Failure to respect children's rights

Supervised contacts without grounds, prohibition of family contacts, unjustified housing in an intensive supervision unit, refusal to consult the child about their situation, harm to their cultural safety.

Caseworker conduct

Lack of respect, inappropriate remarks, visible bias, negligence in gathering information, failure to verify reported facts, lack of diligence, deficient communication.

Mistreatment in care

Mistreatment in foster family, intermediate resource or rehabilitation centre, failure to meet the child's fundamental needs, abusive isolation, neglect of medical or educational care.

What no recourse can do

None of the three recourses presented in this guide can overturn a youth court decision. If the Youth Division has issued an order (placement, measures, contacts), only an appeal before the Court of Quebec or the Court of Appeal can modify it.

The Québec Ombudsman and the commissioners cannot modify a social worker's assessment report, nor overturn a clinical decision of the DPJ. They can however verify whether administrative and procedural rules were respected.

Confidentiality guaranteed at the CDPDJ: the Commission does not disclose the identity of the person who files an investigation request. Neither the DPJ, the child, nor the parents will know who filed the request. This is an important protection against retaliation.

The process

The guide in 4 simple steps

1

Identify the right body for your situation

There are three distinct recourses for filing a complaint against the DPJ. Each corresponds to a specific situation.

Service Quality and Complaints Commissioner of the CISSS/CIUSSS — first recourse for service quality: caseworker conduct, lack of respect, delays, deficient communication, procedures not followed. The DPJ is part of the CISSS/CIUSSS in your region.
Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse (CDPDJ) — for an infringement of the rights of a child in DPJ care: failure to respect the rights recognized by the Youth Protection Act, or by the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
Québec Ombudsmansecond recourse if you are dissatisfied with the Complaints Commissioner's decision, or if they have not responded within 45 days.

If unsure of the right body, contact the Centre d'assistance et d'accompagnement aux plaintes (CAAP) free of charge at 1 877 767-2227. This free service mandated by the Ministry of Health and Social Services helps you choose the right path and draft your complaint.

2

Gather and organize your facts

Open a document and write a clear and factual chronological summary. Include these essential elements:

The full name of the child, their date of birth, and their DPJ file number if possible
The name of the DPJ caseworker(s) concerned, and the relevant CISSS/CIUSSS (in your region)
The key dates of the events complained of (report, assessment, decisions, placement, contacts)
A precise description of the actions or inactions complained of — e.g., "did not consult the 14-year-old child about her wish to return home", "supervised contacts for 6 months without documented grounds"
The documents in your possession: letters from the DPJ, assessment reports, decisions, signed agreements, court orders, call notes
Steps already taken to resolve the situation (discussions with the caseworker, their supervisor, users' committee)
The corrective measures you wish to obtain
3

Ask Claude to draft your complaint

Open Claude — or Gemini or ChatGPT — and paste your facts with this prompt adapted to your situation:

"I want to draft a complaint to the [Service Quality and Complaints Commissioner of the CISSS/CIUSSS / Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse for an infringement of rights / Québec Ombudsman as second recourse] in Quebec, concerning the DPJ of [region]. The child concerned is [name, age]. Here are my facts: [paste your chronological summary]. Draft a factual, clear and respectful complaint. Identify the rights that appear to have been violated under the Youth Protection Act (right to be consulted, to be represented, to maintain family contacts, to receive adequate services, to be heard). The document must be professional, chronological, and ready to be submitted."

The AI will draft a structured initial version that connects your facts to the applicable rights. Read carefully and verify that all facts are accurate before submitting.

4

Submit your complaint to the right body

Here are the contact details of the three bodies. Start with the one that corresponds to your situation.

First recourse — Complaints Commissioner of the CISSS/CIUSSS
Deadline
Written response within 45 days of receiving the complaint
Free help
For an infringement of rights — Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse (CDPDJ)
Email
jeunesse@cdpdj.qc.ca (Youth Investigations Directorate) · information@cdpdj.qc.ca (general questions)
Telephone
Toll-free: 1 800 361-6477 (option 3) · Montreal: 514 873-5146
Address
360, rue Saint-Jacques, 2nd floor, Montréal (Québec) H2Y 1P5
Deadline
No filing deadline · Processing within 6 months
Second recourse — Québec Ombudsman
Telephone
Quebec City: 418 643-2688 · Toll-free: 1 800 463-5070
Fax
1 866 902-7130
Address
800, place D'Youville, 19th floor, Québec (Québec) G1R 3P4
Deadline
Up to 2 years after the Complaints Commissioner's decision

All these services are entirely free and confidential. The three bodies are independent of the CISSS/CIUSSS and the DPJ.

What may happen next

Possible outcomes of a complaint against the DPJ

Depending on the body seized and the seriousness of the facts, several measures can be taken:

Recommendations of corrective measures to the DPJ · Commitment by the institution to change its practices · Cessation of the act complained of · Staff training · Compensatory measures for the child · Application to the Tribunal for an infringement of rights (by the CDPDJ)

The CDPDJ has a special power: if it concludes that there is an infringement of rights and its recommendations are not followed within the set deadline, it can seize the youth court directly. The court can then order the necessary corrective measures, including the return of a child to their family or the end of unjustified supervised contacts.

If a complaint reveals serious professional misconduct by a caseworker (social worker, psychoeducator, psychologist), the file can also be forwarded to their professional order — OTSTCFQ for social workers, Ordre des psychologues du Québec, or Ordre des psychoéducateurs et psychoéducatrices du Québec.

Important limits

What AI does — and what it does not do

AI helps you organize your facts and draft a clear and respectful complaint. It does not give you legal advice and does not replace a lawyer.

Cases involving the DPJ are often complex and emotionally trying. If you disagree with a measure imposed by the Youth Division, specific judicial recourses exist. Legal aid generally covers youth protection cases for parents and children, regardless of income.

The Centres de justice de proximité also offer free legal information. Other community organizations offer support to families involved with the DPJ: the CAAP (1 877 767-2227), the Collectif Ex-Placé DPJ for youth in care and their allies, or the Association des grands-parents du Québec for grandparents whose grandchildren are in care.

Ready to submit your complaint?

GET HELP FROM CAAP →
In summary

Children's rights deserve to be defended

The DPJ exercises considerable power over the lives of Quebec families. When this power is misused, when a child's rights are violated, or when a caseworker fails in their obligations, three free and independent recourses exist: the Complaints Commissioner of the CISSS/CIUSSS for service quality, the CDPDJ for an infringement of a child's rights, and the Québec Ombudsman as second recourse. Identify the right body, organize your facts, draft your complaint with the help of AI, and submit it. You are not alone in this process — the CAAP can support you free of charge.

An error to report? Information to add or a question about this guide? Write to us at justice-quebec@outlook.com — we read every message.