Remove Foster Care Remove Interventional Remove Welfare
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West Virginia does NOT underspend on “child welfare” – it MIS-spends

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

West Virginia probably spends on child welfare at a rate anywhere from 9% to 44% above the national average. To read West Virginia Watch and other news outlets constantly bemoaning a supposed lack of funding for child welfare, youd think West Virginia was spending at or near the lowest rate in the country. Apparently, they never have.

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The fundamental misconception at the heart of the Family First Act

Child Welfare Monitor

States have been hard-put to devise plans for implementing the new services because the bill was designed to fix a problem that did not exist–the alleged absence of child welfare services designed to help families stay together. Sometimes, in order to prevent the need for foster care, mom and dad might need a little help.

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The tattletale factor in “child welfare”

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

It seems like a week doesn’t go by without some “child welfare” agency announcing an initiative that supposedly will make family policing kinder and gentler. On the other hand, another in a long line of studies suggests it may reduce foster care entries. Connecticut is a case in point. The effort is probably sincere.

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A child welfare case leads to a stunning dissent from Michigan’s Chief Justice

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

More than just a dissent in an individual case, this opinion is a call to transform “child welfare” in Michigan – and everywhere else. is a brilliant dissection of the failings of both law and practice in “child welfare” in Michigan and pretty much everywhere else in America. In contrast, McCormack wrote, when Washington D.C.

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Trauma-informed Care Creates a Path Forward

Shelter, Inc

This is especially true for children who have faced extreme circumstances such as abuse, neglect, or loss, often as part of child welfare systems. Shelter’s professional staff provides free trauma-informed clinical care to children who have experienced trauma so they can heal, build trust, and create a path forward.

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NCCPR news and commentary round-up, week ending April 4, 2023

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Guest Anjana Samant of the ACLU Women’s Rights Project says that “I definitely see work in the child welfare system as a core, just basic ACLU bread-and-butter of civil liberties fight.” ● Samant also discusses the enormous harm of predictive analytics algorithms in child welfare. And ICYMI, here’s the trailer:

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Further delay to children’s social care reform will prolong ‘crisis’ and increase costs, charities warn

Community Care

In the meantime, ministers have allocated over £250m for 2025-26 to “test innovative measures to support children and reduce costs for local authorities”, including allowances for kinship carers and the rollout of regional hubs to support foster care recruitment. “Further delays will see [costs] escalate.”