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In Oregon, "childwelfare" has become a pathetic game of whack-a-mole. They also revealed that Oregons family police agency (a more accurate term than childwelfare agency) knew about the abuse for at least 18 months and did nothing. And the reason for that is not because there are too few foster parents.
59 new parents received one-on-one support through our Healthy Families program, 22 “forever families ” were established through our fostercare program, and critical housing and support services were providedfor youth in crisis, youth experiencing homelessness and young adultsaging out of the fostercare system.
For example, in Minnesota Black children are twice as likely to be thrown into fostercare as white children. Minnesota’s record of racial disparity in investigations and fostercare is worse than the national average, and the disparities in Hennepin and Ramsey Counties are worse than the state average.
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. Oh, don’t get me wrong.
This is the model that’s proven so successful in New York City – where a comprehensive evaluation found that it reduced time in fostercare with no compromise of safety. It’s one reason New York City’s rate of removal is well under one-third the rate of Massachusetts, even when rates of child poverty are factored in.
At Shelter Youth & Family Services, we honor Black History Month by shining a light on three pioneers who tirelessly fought for justice and equality in America, including in the childwelfare system. This includes training foster parents and social workers in cultural competency and actively recruiting more Black foster families.
But I should explain at the top why this commentary is on a blog about the “childwelfare” system. AFA’s members include some of the most strident supporters of tearing apart more families and some of those deepest in denial about racism in childwelfare. She also condemned the Indian ChildWelfare Act.
Vivek Sankaran, director of the ChildAdvocacy Law Clinic and the ChildWelfare Appellate Clinic at the University Michigan Law School summed it up perfectly: In many ways, the decision was unexceptional. Writing in The Imprint , Prof. Appellate courts would intervene. As the lawyers might say, the circuits are split.
She is the state’s “Child Advocate,” and before that ran a prestigious private agency specializing in adoption and fostercare. Like most people in “childwelfare” her intentions are good. million – and the state would save more than that in reducing needless investigations and fostercare.
She had to fight her way through a long, cumbersome appeals process before she could get overturned a determination by a caseworker for the Washington State family police agency (a more accurate term than “childwelfare” agency) that the allegation against her was “founded.” arm of the Foster Parents Association of Washington State.
So the public was primed to scapegoat family preservation when Nixzmary Brown died in January, 2006 – leading to a foster-care panic , a sharp sudden increase in the number of children torn from everyone they know and love and consigned to the chaos of fostercare. The panic was welcomed by the Times.
Christina has been a licensed foster parent in the state of Washington for six years and has adopted one child from the fostercare system. Prior to becoming a foster parent, she was a CASA for three years. She lives in the Seattle area with her husband and daughter.
But it still fell into some of the traps that characterize much of the journalism of childwelfare – including a crucial misunderstanding of poverty and neglect and one inflammatory claim that, as originally published, was flat wrong. ? The exception was the Times’ superb 2017 story about fostercare as the new “Jane Crow.”)
The harsh reality is not all children are represented equally in the childwelfare system, nor do they have equal outcomes. For example, in the American population of children, African Americans make up 15%, but they represent 33% of fostercare children. of children’s national population.
What happened to Detlaff is just one example of “childwelfare” and the moral bankruptcy of social work. This one takes on what may be the most dangerous phrase in the family policing lexicon: “best interests of the child.” One of those ways is using visits between children in fostercare and their parents as a weapon.
The study looks at every step of the process, from investigations to how often a caseworker claims a case is “substantiated” to entries into fostercare to termination of children’s rights to their parents (a more accurate term than termination of parental rights). A child abuse investigation is not a benign act.
Colorado takes children from their parents at a rate 30% above the national average – and some counties have rates of child removal that are even worse, according to a report released today by a national childadvocacy organization. When it comes to childwelfare, Colorado trails.”
.” -- Ann Haines Holy Eagle on what the Minnesota family police stole from her By now we’re all familiar with one odious practice of most family police agencies (a more accurate term than “childwelfare” agencies): They steal the Social Security benefits to which some foster children are entitled and keep the money for themselves.
Remember all those scare stories about how, because COVID-19 prevented overwhelmingly white disproportionately middle-class “mandated reporters” from constantly having their “eyes” on children who are neither, their parents would unleash upon their own children a “pandemic of child abuse” ? million Black children.
● “Which would be worse,” asks Jasmine Wali, director of policy & advocacy at JMAC for Families, in this story for The Nation : “being beaten by your partner, or having social services take away your children? And here’s part two , which explains why “creme" is to food what “permanency” is to childwelfare: a fake substitute. ●
For nearly a decade, Oregons approach to childwelfare has amounted to a pathetic game of whack-a-mole. That investigation whacked the state into raising standards for foster homes. It wound up warehousing foster children in offices and jails. So whack a childadvocacy group brought a lawsuit to prohibit the practice.
Capitol Visitor Center, First Street and East Capitol Street, Washington, DC 20515, to explore legislative remedies should the Supreme Court overturn the constitutionality of the Indian ChildWelfare Act (ICWA). They urged the Supreme Court to “uphold the Indian ChildWelfare Act’s constitutionality in all respects.”
? Last week, I was asked to list the most important contributions to the field of family advocacy and family defense made by Prof. As Kathleen Creamer put it in this story from The Imprint “No one has done more than Marty to move this field towards justice — even when no one seemed to care about justice.” ? Martin Guggenheim.
As one of the largest investors in prevention in the United States, All For Kids is dedicated to protecting vulnerable children through advocacy and treatment. We aim to achieve our goals through services and programs designed to nurture children, strengthen families, and build a caring community for sustaining healthy relationships.
(Note that you need to register for each separately You can register for the first event here and the second event here.) ● The head of the family police agency in Missouri is bragging that they have reduced fostercare. Nora McCarthy discusses this in her column for The Imprint.
? As almost everyone reading this probably knows, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments on the constitutionality of the Indian ChildWelfare Act which The Imprint calls “a bedrock law passed in the 1970s to combat cultural genocide committed against Indigenous families.” ? But things have taken a strange turn in Maine.
This is the text of the first of two NCCPR presentations at the 2021 Kempe Center International Virtual Conference: A Call to Action to Change ChildWelfare Most Court-Appointed Special Advocates programs call themselves CASA programs – as you’d expect. They can effectively decide if the child stays in fostercare.
When Honolulu Civil Beat reached out to NCCPR for comment on the findings of a study, done by the state’s own Court Improvement Project, of what really happens in childwelfare court hearings, I said: “What this report tells us is that Hawaii doesn’t really have a court system for ‘childwelfare’ cases at all.
Nevertheless, I Persisted: Robin’s Inspiring Success Story When Robin was just three years old, her mother’s substance use led to her and her siblings being placed in fostercare for their safety. Read how Robin took control of her destiny, choosing to defy the statistics about children in fostercare rather than be defined by them.
. ● Remember the children who were torn from their parents and thrown into fostercare because the parents committed the crime of Driving While Black? Now, Tennessee Lookout reports , the mother is suing.
They said my child would be safer in fostercare than with me," said the mother of Ja'Ceon Terry, "but see the outcome of what happened." And check out this detailed testimony from several New York City family defense and family advocacy organizations. ? And now we have the perfect real-world example.
In The Grio, Shereen White, director of advocacy and policy at Children’s Rights, and Prof. In Massachusetts, the Boston Globe reports, former foster youth who were harmed when they were torn from their homes protested at the State Capitol. Instead, she said, she was placed with a foster family.
Hear an authentic, piercing, and comprehensive conversation about our nation’s childwelfare system and its impact on children, especially children. The post A Former FosterChild, Now Child Rights Lawyer, Shares Piercing Insight on the ChildWelfare System | Podcast Episode 21 appeared first on Child Advocates.
It provides astoundingly small amounts of cash or basic goods so children can stay home or return home because, guess what, they were taken, or are now trapped in fostercare, because of poverty alone. It’s an excellent program – but why is it just a tiny add-on to a system built on family policing and fostercare?
In fact, given that the childwelfare establishment has no shame, expect the usual op-eds to have token boilerplate statements about racial justice – even as they propose making a profoundly racist family policing system even bigger and more powerful. The problem of child abuse is serious and real, but the solutions have been phony.
. ● As is so often the case, the professor’s comments minimize the harm of one of the worst “adverse childhood experiences” a child can endure – being torn from everyone s/he knows and loves and thrown into fostercare. I have a column about it in CalMatters. It has decimated their lives.
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.
I have written often about how the entire debate over what to do about childwelfare has been poisoned by “health terrorism,” the misrepresentation of the true nature and scope of a problem in the name of “raising awareness.” A bill to replace anonymous reporting with confidential reporting has passed the Texas Legislature.
It also touches on the sham of “team decision-making,” the harm of forcing parents to pay part of the cost of children’s fostercare (a payment that should properly be called “ransom”) and the evil of a practice known as “concurrent planning. ” Indeed, it can endanger the fetus to suddenly stop using such medication when pregnant.
No Black history in America or history of children’s advocacy can be complete without the name of Marian Wright Edelman. Her impact on the welfare of all children has been profound. a child’sadvocacy and research center. And the history of ChildWelfare. Marian Wright Edelman is a name to remember.
No Black history in America or history of children’s advocacy can be complete without the name of Marian Wright Edelman. Her impact on the welfare of all children has been profound. a child’sadvocacy and research center. And the history of ChildWelfare. Marian Wright Edelman is a name to remember.
If enacted, the bill would expand state fostercare and adoption assistance programs to provide driving preparation assistance to foster youth and related training for foster parents. We will also hear from Duane Price, a young man with experience in fostercare whose life was enhanced by getting a car.
Back to Blogs Community Blog Adams County Celebrates Kinship Care Month This Kinship Care Month Adams County is recognizing an outstanding kinship caregiver, caseworker and community partner for all they do to support youth in fostercare and kinship caregivers.
And the head of a trade association for “children’s advocacy centers,” where many such exams are performed, says the real problem is agencies aren’t doing enough of them. ● The child never needed to be taken. So they used a blackmail placement – aka hidden fostercare. States call it “child support.”
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