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FOSTER CHILDREN
Authors foster emotion in 'On
Their Own'
It is often taken for granted in this country that a
child who turns 18 is ready for adulthood, having had the advantages of
continuous parental support, health care and education. Whether those
assumptions apply to most 18-year-olds is debatable, but there is no
doubt that a certain class of young people struggle to keep from falling
through the cracks.
These children are graduates of foster care, a
taxpayer-supported housing system available in all 50 states for youths
who are removed from their homes, mostly because of abuse or neglect
from their parents. Some foster children get lucky and form lasting
relationships with their foster parents, while others get bounced from
one home to another because of behavioral problems or incompatibility.
In 2001, the latest year for which figures are
available, 542,000 children were in foster care nationwide and 19,008
left the system because they were too old to remain eligible for the
program. In most states, including Nevada, that age is 18. Of those who
"age out" of the foster care system, many wind up falling on hard times
while their age-group peers are going off to college.
This American tragedy is captured succinctly in a new
book, "On Their Own," published by Westview Press. With a foreword
written by former President Jimmy Carter, authors Martha Shirk, a former
St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporter, and Gary Stangler, a Missouri resident
who is executive director of the Jim Casey Youth Opportunities
Initiative, put a human face on a population that has been largely
ignored.
Shirk and Stangler tell their story through the eyes
of 10 children from around the country. These young people were forced
to use survival skills without much of a safety net once foster care was
in their rearview mirrors.
One of the biggest struggles was experienced by
Alfonso Torres of Pembroke Pines, Fla., who was separated from his
parents at age 10. In a chapter titled "All My Life, I Had Prayed For A
Family," readers follow Torres down his path of petty crime. It was a
cycle he couldn't break despite vows to straighten up. When he turned 18
and aged out of the foster care system he was still locked up in a
juvenile detention center with a week to go. Weeks before his release he
made a phone call to his social worker because he had nowhere else to
go.
"I called my social worker and asked, 'What's going to
happen when I turn 18?' " Torres told the authors. "And he said, 'I
don't know.' "
Raquel Tolston was placed in foster care at age 12 by
child protection workers because of her inability to get along with her
abusive mother. At 18 she spent time in a Job Corps dormitory in Utah
and then moved to San Francisco. "And for the last 16 months, Raquel has
been truly homeless, bouncing from one shelter to another, with brief
stays in a motel or a boarding house whenever she's had enough cash to
pay her own way," the authors wrote.
In America's heartland they found Casey-Jack Kitos of
Lawrence, Kan. Kitos, who entered foster care at age 14 after being
removed from an abusive household, saw the U.S. Army as his ticket for a
college education. But medical problems during basic training at Fort
Benning, Ga., curtailed those dreams and he returned to Lawrence
following his discharge from the military. He got a $6.75-an-hour job at
a gas station and in September 2002 moved in with his friends, Renita
and Jerry Freeman, who told him he could stay until their son returned
from the Army in May 2003.
"But even without having to pay market rent, he has
money problems," the authors wrote. "He has about $500 a month in fixed
expenses -- a car payment, car insurance, his cell phone bill, plus the
installment payment on the laptop. Already, he's one month in arrears on
his car payment and two months behind on everything else, with a grand
total of $25 in the bank."
Each chapter of "On Their Own" goes into detail about
the considerable bureaucratic hurdles the children faced as they tried
to find their footing.
Shirk and Stangler don't simply tell the stories of
these children, though. The authors also developed common-sense
solutions involving education, employment and health care. These lessons
are worthy of attention in Nevada, given the state's historically poor
performance when it comes to caring for foster children and looking
after these young people once they age out of the system. This was
reflected earlier this year when bureaucratic snafus delayed the
allocation of $1.3 million in state funds intended for former foster
children in Southern Nevada. With about 100 Southern Nevada children
leaving foster care annually, the money was intended to help them with
housing, utilities, health care and other needs.
The funds were finally disbursed this spring by the
Nevada Division of Children, Youth and Families, with 10 percent set
aside for administrative costs, including mentors for the children.
"On Their Own" should be required reading for all of
Nevada's lawmakers and for anyone else who has a hand in foster care. As
former President Carter wrote:
"We should dream of and plan for a day when fewer
children require foster care. But until that day comes, we have a moral
responsibility to prepare young people leaving foster care for their
journey into adulthood. Our communities must commit themselves to a
common goal of helping these young people to become whole adults who can
fulfill their potential and build bright and promising futures."
Title: "On Their Own: What Happens to Kids When They Age Out of the
Foster Care System."
Authors: Martha Shirk and Gary Stangler.
Pages: 307.
Publisher: Westview Press.
US Price: $24.95.
Review by Steve Kanigher
1 October 2004
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/do/2004/oct/01/517600780.html
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