Khan in hot water for ‘dismissive’ social-worker remarks

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WINNIPEG — Manitoba Tory Leader Obby Khan is under pressure to publicly apologize to social workers after saying they aren’t mental-health professionals.

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WINNIPEG — Manitoba Tory Leader Obby Khan is under pressure to publicly apologize to social workers after saying they aren’t mental-health professionals.

The Manitoba College of Social Workers issued an open letter to Khan this week in which it referenced comments made by him in the legislature March 26.

He had taken shots at the government’s plan to create a $13.6-million mental-health zone in the Health Sciences Centre.

Khan said it would be staffed by social workers, although that detail isn’t confirmed in the 2026-27 budget released last month.

A provincial government spokesperson said the staffing model is being finalized, and various professions are expected to be involved.

The budget includes a promise to place social workers in emergency rooms and urgent care centres 24-7.

“Social workers, yes, do very important work, but they are not mental-health professionals,” Khan said on March 26. “Why is this government putting social workers in the way of potential harm? We have mental-health professionals.”

“We have a government who believes that the mental-health crisis, Manitobans suffering that, can be dealt with social workers.”

His statements are inaccurate, offensive and “deeply dismissive” of the social-work field, the college’s letter reads. The governing body counts roughly 3,000 licensed professionals. Many are employed by hospitals and community health centres.

Social workers can provide psychotherapy and conduct mental-health assessments, the Canadian Association of Social Workers notes online.

Khan’s remarks reflect “a fundamental misunderstanding of the mental-health system,” Barbara Temmerman, the Manitoba college’s registrar, said in an interview. “(Social workers are) already doing front-line mental-health work every day.”

Khan’s words undermine public trust and devalue front-line workers, Temmerman said: “Those comments risk confusing the public about who is safe to turn to in a crisis.”

She signed the college’s letter, which requests that Khan publicly correct his “inaccurate” statements, issue a sincere apology to the profession and engage with social workers and their professional bodies.

On Wednesday, Khan’s office sent an apology letter to the college, but Temmerman said while it’s a good first step, it doesn’t go far enough: the college wants him to issue a public statement.

Khan’s letter says he was “recently made aware” the Canadian Mental Health Association includes social workers as mental-health workers.

“I apologize for this inadvertent error,” his signed letter reads. “Social workers do incredibly important work across Manitoba. They are highly trained professionals, and they are often on the front lines supporting people in difficult moments.

“My comments didn’t reflect that, and I regret that.”

Khan said his focus is on ensuring Manitobans can access a range of mental-health supports, and that he “would welcome the opportunity” to meet with college representatives.

He wasn’t made available for an interview on Wednesday.

The Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals represents roughly 400 social workers. The number is likely higher because some social workers take jobs that are classified differently, including mental-health clinicians, said union president Jason Linklater.

Various allied professions, such as occupational therapists, may take mental-health positions. Khan’s comments last week reflect a wider, systemic misunderstanding of allied professions’ work, Linklater said.

“If the leader of the Official Opposition does not understand what a social worker does in a mental-health setting, the question must be asked — who else doesn’t know?” Linklater asked.

It keeps allied health-care professionals regularly “excluded from the conversation” at the government level, he said.

“Most of the time, people have this impression of ‘social workers are just there to work with child welfare,’” said Bolaji Akinyele-Akanbi, who has been a social worker for upwards of 10 years.

“Social work was founded based on meeting the needs of people. Maybe there’s a need for more education on what social workers do.”

Akinyele-Akanbi, a University of Manitoba professor, has assisted people with anxiety and depression.

Every social-work job touches on mental health because the profession takes a holistic approach, considering various factors in clients’ lives, Akinyele-Akanbi noted.

Mary Anne Clarke has practised social work for four decades. Much of her career has been with First Nations services for children in which assessing suicide risk was a regular task, she said.

“We need more trained, capable social workers throughout all areas of social services,” Clarke said. “We’re facing major challenges that are more deadly and more significant than I’ve seen in over 40 years, in terms of addictions and related issues.”

Social workers also staff correctional facilities, schools, shelters and private practice clinics, among other spaces.

» Winnipeg Free Press

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