For part one, which illustrates how the horror stories go in all directions, see the previous post to this blog.
POVERTY AND NEGLECT
● The
Nation zeroed in on one key part of the problem: families destroyed because parents can’t afford
adequate housing. The story focuses on Missouri, where the problem is
particularly acute and getting worse still, thanks to the horrifying approach taken by the new head of that state’s family police
agency.
● The Nation didn’t stop with what was wrong; they turned to places that are doing better: three counties in
Wisconsin working to reduce needless removals because of housing. The story also cuts through the hype
about the so-called Family First Act, pointing out that, particularly when it
comes to providing families with the concrete help they really need, “Families
First Act funding comes with so many strings attached it’s nearly impossible to
use.”
● Hearst Connecticut Media did a superb job exposing the problem in one of
the richest states in America.
Back in Missouri, the Missouri Independent did stellar
work:
● The cruelty of the family police agency in that state
is apparent in this outstanding story from
the Missouri Independent. It is a story about a family that, through
enormous will and determination, marshaled meager resources to weave a safety
net – only to have the family police come in, over and over, and rip it apart.
It is a story as beautifully written as it is scrupulously reported.
● Still, as this
follow-up story makes clear, you’ve got to
give the Missouri agency credit for this much: They united all sides in the
abortion debate – everyone thinks the behavior of the family police agency in
this case stinks. The story also includes NCCPR’s perspective and that of Prof.
Kelley Fong, author of the landmark study Investigating
Families.
● And I have a commentary
column about the case in the Independent.
● But it’s not just one case. In another example, the family police agency found all the allegations against
Megan Knight to be unfounded. She even passed a background check to care for
foster children in residential treatment. But her own children are still in
foster care. That’s what can happen when families are literally
defense-less.
As the Independent reports, indigent parents in Missouri are not guaranteed an
attorney at all – and when they get one, they’re often far too overloaded to do
much of anything. Here’s what that means in the case of Ms. Knight:
Her four-year-old daughter has been moved seven times since she was taken into foster care in April 2022. Knight said she’s developed behavioral issues Knight attributes to the trauma of separation and being tossed around from home to home.
“When I was able to see her, she would always beg the caseworker, ‘Please, let me go home to my mom,’” she said.
Now, her daughter is in care with a foster family and Knight doesn’t know where in Missouri they are or who the family is. Two of her kids are in another stranger’s home.
