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Celebrating Four Colorado Adoptive Families

CO4Kids

Back to Blogs News & Press Celebrating Four Colorado Adoptive Families November is National Adoption Month DENVER (Nov. 4, 2024) — In honor of National Adoption Month, the Colorado Department of Human Services (CDHS) is spotlighting four incredible families who adopted seven Colorado children and youth from foster or kinship care.

Adoption 111
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When it comes to the problems plaguing “child welfare” wrongful removal drives everything else – including caseworker turnover. Case in point: Massachusetts

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

The story begins and ends with the story of Maria Toscano and her desperate efforts to schedule a visit with her children in foster care. This fall, DCF shifted her children’s goal from reunification to adoption, she said. But it also offers a clue concerning why the caseloads are so high. Then the cycle can be broken.

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Morgan County Family Steps Up for Children in Need

CO4Kids

Amias, now six, was adopted in 2022 making them a family of five including their biological children, Piper 15 and Raylan 12. “He Jessica and Marty continue to provide temporary foster care for children in need in their community. Adopting him started a whole journey of us being foster parents too.

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Massachusetts pilots the most promising reform in child welfare. Guess who’s trying to undercut it.

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

This is the model that’s proven so successful in New York City – where a comprehensive evaluation found that it reduced time in foster care with no compromise of safety. Cara, who asked to keep her last name private, said she had already been in touch with a domestic violence organization about her ex.

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NCCPR at the Kempe Center Conference: Attn: Family Police: Children's "well-being" is none of your damn business!

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

We have forced millions into foster care where the rate of abuse is, in fact, vastly higher than in the general population and, independent studies show , vastly higher than agencies admit in official figures. And did it make children safer? That failure should surprise no one. So, how did that work out?

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NCCPR news and commentary round-up, week ending August 22, 2023

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Kelley Fong asks in a commentary for the Hartford Courant if the head of the state’s family police agency will make sure there’s no foster-care panic. She writes: DCF has expressed a commitment to keeping families together, and has worked, impressively, to decrease foster care caseloads and refer families to community supports.

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NCCPR news and commentary round-up, week ending Jan 11, 2022

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

It was followed by a systematic campaign of forced adoption into white homes, spearheaded by, among others, the Child Welfare League of America. Foster-care panic is like a fire. The attempt to use family policing to destroy Native American culture didn’t end with the horrible institutions known as “boarding schools.”