News and commentary from the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform
concerning child abuse, child welfare, foster care, and family preservation.
● COVID taught us
that when the family police step back and community-based community-run support
organizations step up, child abuse is reduced.
Now the Family Justice Journal devotes an
entire issue to what that kind of support should look
like. (Remember, you can download it as a .pdf to avoid the #$%^& flipbook
format :-))
● And yes, there’s still another study
showing the value of providing concrete help to families in reducing child
abuse.
● A commentary in The Imprint
reminds us of something else that makes a huge difference in improving the
lives of children: good lawyers for them – and for their parents.
● Encouraged by a
dreadful federal law, the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act, states have
long used the family police to persecute pregnant women who use drugs –
including, sometimes especially, marijuana – doing enormous harm to their
children.Now, Investigate West reports
on how the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision is encouraging states to
ratchet up the harm.
The persecution of
pregnant women is triggered by mandatory reporting laws
which require huge numbers of professionals to turn them in.So I hope this Investigate West story is read
closely in the Investigate West newsroom itself, since they’ve been among the
worst offenders when it comes to crusading to expand mandatory reporting to one
of the few categories of professionals now often exempt.I wrote about that here.
● The Imprint reports
that, in its final days in office, the Biden Administration took a first step
toward involving the federal government in curbing the insidious practice of
states swiping foster youths’ Social Security benefits.
● Pridefully
progressive Vermont tears apart families and sends children off to the hell of
foster care at a rate that would make Donald Trump blush proud: the
second-highest rate in America, more than quadruple the national average, when
rates of child poverty are factored in. It’s been that way for decades.Yet this dismal record has largely gone under
the radar in family policing circles and in local media. I have a blog post about it.
Nationally,
little attention has been paid to how family policing functions in
Vermont. For whatever reason, the awful
system next door in New Hampshire gets plenty of attention. But Vermont is even worse; probably the worst
in New England and among the worst in the nation. Yet it goes largely under the radar.
A story
about foster youth getting access to their own records was a useful reminder
that Vermont needs more attention – and Vermont’s leaders need to feel ashamed.
I was
reminded when a story about access to records brought home a comparison between
two mothers and their children.One
lived in Vermont, the other lived near me in Northern Virginia.
Both begin
the same way.A mother’s injuries lead
to prescriptions for opioid painkillers which lead to a substance use disorder.
Vermont
Public recently
told the story of what happened to the son of the first mother, Nathaniel
Farnham, when the Vermont family police agency, the Department of Children and
Families, invaded his life. After two
weeks of supervised visits to the family, Farnham says,
“…one Saturday morning while I was watching cartoons with
my mom, knock on the door, and there’s a DCF worker with two state troopers.
And I’m getting put in the back of a car and off I go, start the 13 years of
hell.”
Farnham was
at the mercy of the DCF from age 7 until he aged out in 2018. He told Vermont Public he’d been in 35
different foster homes and at least eight placements in “residential
treatment.”
The mother in my Virginia
neighborhood was, if anything, in worse shape.She was hooked on prescription opioids and an alcoholic. "I liked
alcohol, it made me feel warm,” she would later say. “And I loved pills. They
took away my tension and my pain."This
addict also had serious mental health issues.
But unlike
Nathaniel Farnham, this mother’s children were not taken away. The local
equivalent of the Department of Children and Families never knocked on the
door. Instead of “13 years of hell” the children lived safely, first in their
suburban Virginia home and then in the White House -- with their mom, Betty
Ford.You
can get a glimpse of their idyllic life here starting at 0:50 in:
The
difference, of course, boils down to a single word: Money. Betty Ford had all
the help she needed to raise her children safely despite her many issues. How
much hell might Nathaniel have been spared, had anything like that kind of help
been offered to his mother?
What
happened to Nathaniel happens in every state, but it’s more likely to happen in
Vermont. Vermont is a top candidate for child removal capital of America.Pridefully progressive Vermont tears apart
families and sends children off to the hell of foster care at
a rate that would make Donald Trump blush proud: the second-highest
rate in America, more than quadruple the national average, when rates of child
poverty are factored in. It’s been that way for decades.
The result
is a system that makes all children less safe.
Most cases
are nothing like the horror stories of children tortured and murdered.In Vermont 93%
of the time, when children are thrown into foster care their parents are
not even accused of physical or sexual abuse.Most cases aren’t even like Nathaniel’s
mother, or Betty Ford.More than 60% of
the time, there’s not even an allegation of any kind of drug abuse at all.
Even Bill
Young, who used to run Vermont’s child welfare agency, is appalled.After the Vermont Center
for Parent Representation documented case after case of families wrongly listed
on the state´s blacklist of alleged child abusers, Young said:
“After about two months, I realized oh my god, it’s
true. These stories are true … [We] have a situation where people begin to
think, you know, in the interest of protecting a child, you can skew the
evidence a little bit, something that people who raised me would have called
lying.”
Consider how
this culture harms children.
Vermonters were appalled when Trump
tore apart families at the Mexican border – we
all remember those children’s cries.And The New York Timesjust
reminded us of the legacy. Yes, when DCF does it, there’s a difference: DCF
workers almost always mean well.But the
trauma of being torn from everyone they know and love is identical.Vermont children cry out the same way for the
same reasons.
No wonder study
after study finds that, in typical cases, children left in their own homes
typically fare better even than comparably-maltreated children placed in foster
care.And yes, that includes cases where
the issue is substance use.
The harm
isn’t just emotional. Multiple
studies find abuse in one-quarter to one-third of family foster homes. The
rate of abuse in group homes and institutions is even worse.
And all the
time, money and effort wasted on false allegations, trivial cases and poverty
cases is, in effect, stolen from finding those few children in real danger.
To its
credit, the Vermont Legislature enacted
modest reforms. But far more needs to be done.For starters, the model of high-quality
family defense pioneered in Vermont by VCPR must be available to every family.
This approach is
proven to reduce foster care with no compromise of safety.In some cases, the federal government will
reimburse half the cost. Between that and the savings from reduced foster care,
this approach pays for itself.
And
lawmakers need to become laser-focused on ameliorating the worst stresses of
poverty.Startlingly
small investments in cash assistance, housing aid and childcare can
dramatically reduce not only neglect but even severe abuse.And when the issue really is substance use
that compromises safety, apply the Betty Ford standard to any Vermonter who
needs treatment.
Is it
really too much to ask that Vermont take a more humane approach to child
welfare than Donald Trump?