Calgary now has a safe surrender site for babies
Calgary now has a safe surrender site for babies, not far from the site where a newborn was found dead in a Bowness dumpster seven years ago.
"Like many Calgarians we were impacted by the death of the infant," said Lisa Garrisen, director of programs with Children's Cottage Society (CCS).
"We knew we wanted to do something that would provide an alternative for parents if they were in desperate situations."
CCS opened a new Child and Family Centre in Montgomery, located at 1804 Home Road N.W., earlier this month, and on Monday opened the Hope’s Cradle near the building’s entrance.
The cradle is an anonymous drop-off site where an infant can be left in a heated, secured bed, signalling a silent alarm which informs staff.
When leaving a baby, the parent can take an information package about available health and social services.
"If a parent is in a circumstance where they are absolutely certain that they are unable to care for an infant, they know there's a way to safely get them to people who will receive them and care for them and connect them to the resources they need to grow up healthy and happy," said Garrisen.
"And then it gives both the parent and the infant the opportunity to look at their future and figure out what that could be."
The cradle adds to the existing resources meant to help parents surrender children safely and access resources themselves.
"We want to make this a really well known alternative."
Hope's Cradle was developed because of the newborn girl placed in a Bowness dumpster on Christmas Eve 2017.
The 19 year-old mother responsible was not given jail time.
The Calgary woman said her baby was born alive but stopped breathing soon after.
When she couldn’t revive her newborn she wrapped the infant in bags and left her in a dumpster at a Bowness trash and recycling drop-off site.
In 2022, Nina Albright received a sentence of 18 months probation after pleading guilty to interfering with a dead body.
A judge ruled that jail time would be excessive in this case.
Homicide detective Dave Sweet was part of the investigation team when the baby’s body was found.
"Children's Cottage it's almost situated in the shadow of what happened back in 2017," said the now retired Calgary Police Service officer.
"I think the story of Baby Eve, as she was coined, shows that you're not too small to make a difference, and one of those things in her legacy is this cradle program."
Sweet volunteers with a group called Gems for Gems, which opened a Hope's Cradle drop-off at Strathmore's fire station in 2021 before working with Children’s Cottage to create its cradle.
"We're just trying to create another option, and a safe option for these babies," said Jordan Guildford, founder of Gems for Gems.
In a separate program, Covenant Health developed two safe surrender sites in Edmonton, near the emergency departments of the Grey Nuns Community Hospital and Misericordia Community Hospital
Since their inception in 2013, Edmonton's Angel Cradles have been used twice.
"Even if its one life, this is all worth it," said Garrisen.
"It is the difference between a life of maybe danger and harm and a life that's full of possibility."
The other goal is to create more awareness and compassion for parents who might make the decision to use a cradle.
"We want the community to learn about understanding and kindness and thinking about how selfless this parent was," said Garrisen.
"It's very easy to villainize women who will make this choice, but we want people to understand that these women are being very brave," said Guildford.
Gems for Gems has helped open Hope’s Cradles in four Canadian cities, and hopes to have one in every major city and some towns across the country.
"Our goals are lofty, because the need is very high," said Guildford.
"In Alberta we expect a few more popping up this year."
She said the cost of creating one is about $25,000.
Garrisen said partnering with Gems for Gems made the process easy and hopes others will consider adding them as well.
"We have one safe surrender site in Calgary and that’s amazing, but we need more," said Garrisen.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
![](https://www.ctvnews.ca/polopoly_fs/1.6978861.1722008569!/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_800/image.jpg)
At least 4 buildings burned at Jasper Park Lodge, others damaged: Fairmont memo
The Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge said Thursday afternoon most of its structures are "standing and intact," including its iconic main lodge.
Major Canadian bank dealing with direct deposit outage on pay day
Scotiabank has acknowledged technical difficulties affecting direct deposits as clients report missed payments Friday morning. On Friday morning, the bank's client services phone line was playing an automated message assuring customers that work was underway to rectify the outage.
Reported rate of child pornography increased 52% in 2023, total crime up 3%: Statistics Canada
Last year, reported child pornography cases increased by more than 50 per cent in Canada, in part due to more cases being sent to police by specialized internet child exploitation units, according to a Statistics Canada report.
Elon Musk's estranged daughter calls out his 'entirely fake' claims about her childhood
Vivian Jenna Wilson, Elon Musk's estranged daughter, publicly refuted several recent anti-trans statements her Tesla CEO and X owner father has made about her.
Federal government posts $3.9B deficit in April, May
The result for the April-to-May period compared to a $1.5 billion surplus for the same stretch last year.
What we know about 'malicious' attack on French train network ahead of Olympics opening
French transport was thrust into chaos Friday just hours ahead of the Olympics 2024 opening ceremony after a series of co-ordinated 'malicious acts' upended high-speed train lines.Here's what happened and what we know so far.
Canada Soccer head investigating 'systemic ethical shortcoming' amid spying scandal
Canada Soccer chief executive officer Kevin Blue said he was investigating a potential 'systemic ethical shortcoming' within the program but has not considered pulling the women's soccer team from the Paris Olympics due to a drone spying scandal.
Trump campaign says it won't commit to Harris debate until she's confirmed as nominee
The Trump campaign said Thursday it would not commit to any future debates until the Democratic Party formally chooses a nominee.
Suspected train sabotage, bad weather dampen spirits ahead of Paris opening ceremony
The Paris Olympics are getting off to a rough start, with suspected acts of sabotage targeting France's flagship high-speed rail network.