Nova Scotia won’t provide health coverage for woman facing deportation
HALIFAX — A woman who grew up in Canada but is facing deportation to Britain won’t be provided health coverage by the Nova Scotia government, a development advocates say could make it harder to win her release from custody.
Fliss Cramman, a 33-year-old mother of four, arrived in Canada when she was eight years old — but her parents failed to obtain her citizenship.
In 2014, she was convicted of offering to traffic heroin, sentenced to 27 months in prison and detained again when the Canada Border Services Agency looked into her citizenship.
Darlene MacEachern of the Elizabeth Fry Society said Thursday the provincial Health Department confirmed it wouldn’t provide health coverage because Cramman is not a Canadian citizen.


