
Los Angeles: Children rushed into foster care system
Too many children have been unnecessarily placed in
foster care because of a “perverse financial incentive” that encourages
local governments to earn money by bringing youngsters into the system,
a new state report says. The study by the California Department of
Social Services also says too much emphasis has been placed on
investigating whether parents abused or neglected their children while
not enough has been done to help families overcome their problems.
“Over a period of years, the original vision for
supporting and healing families through the child welfare system has
deteriorated into an adversarial and coercive approach,” DSS Director
Rita Saenz said.
David Sanders, who took over in March as head of the
troubled Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services,
said experts have estimated that as many as half of the county's foster
children could have been left in their parents' care if the appropriate
services had been provided.
A study by a child welfare think tank released earlier
this year found that the government spends an average of $65,000 to
$85,000 a year to house and educate a foster child in a group home. The
total costs are staggering, authors of the report wrote, noting that the
direct costs of child abuse and neglect nationwide are estimated at $25
billion a year while indirect costs such as juvenile delinquency, adult
criminality and lost productivity to society total $95 billion.
In response, the Child Welfare Services Stakeholders
Group, a body of 60 child-welfare experts formed by Gov. Gray Davis in
2000, has proposed an “ambitious and far-reaching overhaul” of the
state's child-welfare system.
Andrew Bridge, managing director of child-welfare
reform programs at The Broad Foundation in Los Angeles, said one of the
most basic problems with the system is restrictions that provide money
only when a child enters foster care. “The county will only continue to
receive funding for the period it keeps the child in its care. You can't
run a system that is based on a buck-a-head for as long as you can keep
the child,” Bridge said.
The state report said California has 13 percent of the
nation's total child population and 20 percent of its foster children.
More than 700,000 children come into contact with the child-welfare
system annually statewide. About 77 percent of those in foster care were
removed from their homes for neglect. In Los Angeles County, more than
160,000 children came into contact with the system last year. Nearly 80
percent were involved because of neglect. More than 91,000 children are
in foster homes statewide. In the county, the $1.4 billion DCFS budget
pays to provide services to 75,000 children in the system or living in
adoptive homes. Of those, nearly 30,000 actually live in foster homes.
The stakeholders' report recommends the Department of
Social Services seek approval from the federal government for more
flexible use of its $3.7 billion annual child-welfare budget so more
money can be spent on services to help keep families together. Congress
is expected to take up legislation next year dealing with reforms in how
the system is funded. The stakeholders also recommended that the state
improve its method of contracting with public and private foster care
agencies.
Of the county's 30,000 children in foster homes, an
average of 6 percent to 7 percent are abused and neglected, a rate among
the highest in the nation.
“The safety issue is such a big one,” Sanders said.
“Los Angeles County is way out of line with the rest of the country. You
just have kids who are being abused after we have supposedly put them in
a safer environment.”
Janis Spire, executive director of the Alliance for
Children's Rights in Los Angeles, said the report outlines the “only
realistic path toward achieving stable, secure homes for our children.
The toughest job is still ahead in terms of providing a step-by-step
plan for achieving these goals.”
By Troy Anderson
1 October 2003
http://www.trivalleyherald.com/Stories/0,1413,86~10669~1666155,00.html
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