Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Foster care in America: Sometimes it takes a lawsuit to save a child


Richard Wexler

Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Foster care in America: Sometimes it takes a lawsuit to save a child

In a previous post to this Blog, I took issue with an attempt by Bryan Samuels, who runs the federal government’s Administration on Children Youth and Families, to try to let the foster care system off the hook for the dismal prospects of so many former foster children.

Fortunately, Samuels now has a new boss who believes in accountability.

In that same interview, with Youth Today, Samuels made comments that were nearly as absurd concerning class-action lawsuits to reform child welfare systems. He appears to suggest that these lawsuits really aren’t needed anymore because now the federal government has its own process for evaluating child welfare systems, known as Child and Family Services Reviews (CFSRs).

Yeah, right.

As it happens, one of the very few issues on which there is near-unanimity in the child welfare community is the consensus that CFSRs are c-r-a-p.

FULL STORY

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