This site uses cookies to improve your experience. To help us insure we adhere to various privacy regulations, please select your country/region of residence. If you do not select a country, we will assume you are from the United States. Select your Cookie Settings or view our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Used for the proper function of the website
Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Strictly Necessary: Used for the proper function of the website
Performance/Analytics: Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Seventeen years after we first raised the issue, an ugly little practice that leads to hundreds of needless fostercare placements in Kansas every year finally is getting some attention though far from all of the attention it deserves. Its a special Kansas twist on the ugly practice of hidden fostercare.
Back to Blogs Community Blog ChildWelfare FAQs Regarding Family Detention or Deportation click to Download information in pdf The following information is not legal advice or guidance. What is the states role in overseeing childwelfare in Colorado? What should I do?
But New York Citys family police agency, the Administration for Childrens Services, charged her with neglect. gave birth, the newborn tested positive for methadone which had been prescribed to Ms. to control her addiction. The agency didnt stop there. They also charged the father, known in court papers as Mr. B.,
Year after year, states and the federal government continue to release annual data showing a decline in the number of children in fostercare, congratulating themselves on keeping families together. percent over the previous year 15.6 percent since 2018. “We
But it’s hard to imagine anything that more perfectly captures the banality of childwelfare thinking than this waste of $20 million: Five organizations will spend this federal grant money to create a “Quality Improvement Center on Engaging Youth in Finding Permanency.” Where oh where to begin. There are many such groups.
Back to Blogs Parent Partner Blog CDHS honors five Colorado families in celebration of National FosterCare Month Denver (May 1, 2025) In celebration of National FosterCare Month and to encourage more Coloradans to become foster parents, the Colorado Department of Human Services (CDHS) is honoring five foster families.
If you are wondering what mental health and childwelfare services KVC provides and in which areas, this guide is for you! Get ready to learn how you or others can take advantage of KVC’s child and family services. See below or click here to see a helpful graphic that shows what our continuum of care is. KVC Kansas.
Nearly 15% of Native American children, nearly 15% of Hispanic children and nearly 20% of Black children will be placed in fostercare, according to the study. In fact, Arizona has been in foster-care panic mode for most of the past 20 years – a national record. times higher than the rate in New York City.
The study found that when COVID-19 forced the city’s family policing agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, to step back and community-run community-based mutual aid organizations stepped up, the trauma of needless investigation and fostercare was significantly reduced, with no compromise of safety.
Often, when I single out for criticism particular stories about “childwelfare” – or as it should be called family policing, it’s because the reporter never bothered to even speak to parents who have had their children taken, or to lawyers for such parents. It’s not like the state can’t afford to step in and provide this money.
The number of ways family policing agencies (a more accurate term than “childwelfare” agencies) can hurt the children they are mandated to protect is limited only by their imagination – and, unfortunately, this is the one area where they show any imagination at all. NCCPR’s Vice President was co-counsel for the plaintiffs.)
Monday: Context for the new study : The Administration for Children’s Services’ own data show that when the agency pulled back, did fewer investigations and took fewer children – child safety improved. ? The exception was the Times’ superb 2017 story about fostercare as the new “Jane Crow.”)
Khadijah Abdurahman, who is both a parent with lived experience dealing with New York City’s family policing agency, the Administration for Children’s Services – and a Tech Research Fellow at the UCLA Center for Critical Internet Inquiry. I have a blog post about her powerful story in Logic Magazine. with panelists Prof.
New York City Administration for Children's Services Commissioner Jess Dannhauser Poor Jess Dannhauser. He writes: Anyone can make a report to New York State’s child abuse hotline. Dannhauser (or some flack in the ACS p.r. department) wrote a letter to the editor that regurgitated his standard excuse.
Whether it’s housing subsidies, childcare assistance, or cash aid, there appears to be the same positive effect — reducing CPS reports. Unfortunately, the federal Administration for Children and Families hasn’t quite gotten the message. One is 16, the other 13. The post includes excellent recommendations for reform. ●
Alan Dettlaff, was invited by the ChildWelfare League of America, a trade association whose members include agencies paid for each day they hold children in fostercare, to write the forward for an issue of one of their journals. A founder of the upEND Movement, Prof. Then CWLA refused to publish it.
NASW Senior Practice Associate, School Social Work and ChildWelfare. It was during the Clinton Administration when then President Bill Clinton declared November National Adoption Month. Here are some resources: Requirements to Adopt a Child. Adoption Assistance for Children Adopted from FosterCare.
It’s all in a report commissioned by the Administration for Children’s Services itself. Yesterday: Context for the new study : The Administration for Children’s Services’ own data show that when the agency pulled back, did fewer investigations and took fewer children – child safety improved. ? Emphasis in original].
According to Virginia Public Media : Avula noted Virginia’s rate of placement with relatives is less than half of the national average — a statistic he said is skewed by the fact that local social services departments in the state prioritize informal placements with relatives before sending a child into the fostercare system.
The Hawaii State Capitol As regular readers of this blog know, many states are swiping money from foster children to reimburse themselves for giving those youth the “privilege” of living in fostercare. It happens to foster youth who are entitled to Social Security Disability or Survivor benefits.
● Want to see how easy it is for the fostercare system to become the ultimate middle-class entitlement – step right up and take a poor person’s child for your very own? One of the victims in the case endured sexual abuse that led to a 30-year prison sentence for a former foster father in 2017.
But that figure has meaning only in the context of two figures that represent earlier steps in the process, which are always discussed first in the Child Maltreatment reports. “Referrals” is the childwelfare system’s term for reports to the state child protective services hotline.
And the listing increases the odds that, even if the children weren’t thrown into fostercare this time, it will happen if the family is reported again – because the listing raises suspicions, whether it’s the guess of a human caseworker or a computer algorithm raising a family’s “risk score.”
Dorothy Roberts’ new book, Torn Apart: How the ChildWelfare System Destroys Black Families -- and How Abolition Can Build a Safer World The event, sponsored by Rise, takes place April 16, and it’s available in person or online. They don’t call it that, of course, they call it “child support.” You can register here. ?
The article aptly describes the Center as a first-of-its-kind organization that intends to engage in affirmative litigation with the [Administration for Children’s Services] —hitting it with lawsuits to potentially hold it accountable for allegedly violating families’ constitutional rights via heavy-handed investigatory and removal tactics.
New data from Pennsylvania confirm: When America’s childwelfare establishment fearmongers predicted that COVID would bring on a “pandemic of child abuse” it was just the usual health terrorism. Then came the corollary: Sure, you can’t see the pandemic of child abuse now – but just you wait until we get back to normal!
So, what did the Herald write when something remarkably similar happened in fostercare? So, what did the Herald write when something remarkably similar happened in fostercare? On The Imprint podcast, journalist Rebecca Nagle discusses her findings about the campaign to destroy the Indian ChildWelfare Act. ?
I have written before about how mandatory child abuse reporting laws backfire. They overload childwelfare systems – or as they should be called, “family policing systems” -- with false reports and cases in which poverty is confused with neglect , stealing time from finding the few children in real danger.
In New York, it’s illegal to tear children from their homes and throw them into fostercare just because they “witnessed domestic violence” – typically a husband or boyfriend beating the child’s mother. New York’s family police agency is still harassing survivors of domestic violence and their children.
With the capable Lead Organizer, Amani Desamours, and her Student Leadership Team handling Thursday’s virtual Student Advocacy Day, I had the privilege of attending the pivotal Children’s Bureau’s National Convening on Kinship Care. Now, more children will get the opportunity to live with relatives.
Back to Blogs ChildWelfare Blog Colorado Juvenile Parole Board (JPB) Seeking Applications to Fill One Public At-Large Seat The JPB is a nine-member, Type 1 transfer board, supported by staff housed in the Office of Children, Youth, and Families (OCYF) within the Colorado Department of Human Services (CDHS). or at 303-506-0584.
Back to Blogs ChildWelfare Blog NTDC (National Training and Development) Statewide Train-the-Trainer Training The NTDC (National Training and Development Curriculum) continues to be the preferred curriculum for certifying foster/adoptive parents in Colorado.
Hey, remember when New York City schools and the city’s family policing agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, promised that this year they wouldn’t traumatize children and families by sending caseworkers to investigate them on “educational neglect” charges just because they felt it was still unsafe to send them to in-person classes?
Commission on Civil Rights is examining racism in the New York family policing system (a more accurate term than “childwelfare” system). The New York Advisory Committee to the U.S. New York’s institutional providers of family defense prepared in-depth written testimony that is a report in itself.
Roberts understood before anyone, that family policing – a more accurate term than “childwelfare” – is a reproductive justice issue. Gothamist has a story about how she raised $40,000 for an ad campaign to tell families their rights when the city’s family police agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, is at the door.
The New York City Administration for Children's Services Uses Highly Coercive Tactics to Illegally Search Tens of Thousands of Families’ Homes Every Year. Rather they are the headline and subhead that begin a lawsuit against New York City’s family police agency, the Administration for Children’s Services.
Bringing Innovation & ChildWelfare Best Practices. In this role, she led a team that dramatically grew community support for children who are in fostercare due to abuse or neglect, increasing the organization’s foster and adoptive families by 78%, from 500 to 892 homes.
is a childwelfare agency that works to end the cycle of child abuse and neglect through comprehensive and community-based services for children and families at risk and in need. s programs, services, management, and administration. Shelter, Inc. Shelter, Inc. COA Accreditation evaluated all aspects of Shelter Inc.’s
KVC case managers Victoria Clark, Dalton Shump, and Micah McEwan all work for the Olathe, Kansas office, where they coordinate and support the day-to-day needs of children and teens in fostercare and their families. I had a friend encourage me to apply to KVC, to explore if social work in the childwelfare system would be a good fit.
by Patty Flores I am grateful to be publishing this essay by a gifted and needed young voice in the childwelfare space. She spent half of her life in fostercare, struggling with substance abuse. in Administration of Justice from Pierce College, a B.A. They argue that fostercare is not the answer.
While fostercare can be a crucial safety net for children and families in challenging circumstances, we at KVC know how important it is to help families stay together. Fostercare prevention and family preservation services help families remain intact, allowing children to grow and thrive! fostercare system.
Gothamist has real news about what should be called fake Miranda rights – the notices that New York City’s family police agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, will give parents when ACS caseworkers pound on their doors.
The Bronx Defenders is suing New York City’s family police agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, over such a case. You may think you know all about the evil - and that is the word -- inflicted on Native American children by the ChildWelfare League of America – but now please read this from The New York Times.
And again, Black children are hit hardest, taken into fostercare at a rate 50% above their rate in the Indiana child population. The problem with this is the problem that has plagued America’s entire war against child abuse for decades: Every time we take a swing at “bad parents” the blow lands on their children.
We organize all of the trending information in your field so you don't have to. Join 25,000+ users and stay up to date on the latest articles your peers are reading.
You know about us, now we want to get to know you!
Let's personalize your content
Let's get even more personalized
We recognize your account from another site in our network, please click 'Send Email' below to continue with verifying your account and setting a password.
Let's personalize your content