On any given day, over a half million American children and youth are living away from their families in foster care, generally prompted by issues of neglect or abuse. While the child welfare system is designed to keep children safe, that isn't enough. All children need and deserve to be connected permanently to a nurturing family that offers unconditional support.
"In many respects, we succeed at removing children from dangerous environments only to put them in a different kind of harm's way," says Casey Foundation President Douglas W. Nelson. "We simply cannot make any child truly secure until we can ensure that he or she will again become part of a loving and lasting family."
Three key steps to improving the child welfare system include improving federal child welfare financing, supporting measures to ensure permanent family connections for every child, and expanding Medicaid support so children get needed health services.
The way federal child welfare financing is now structured runs counter to key goals like seeking permanent family connections for every child or ensuring the well-being of children who have been maltreated. For example, the current system offers an open-ended entitlement to care for children removed from their families but only limited funds to provide more support to troubled families and prevent out-of-home placements in the first place.
Remedies include:
To ensure a healthy, enduring family relationship for all children—regardless of age, race, culture, national origin, special need, or complex circumstances—the federal government should:
Many children and youth in state custody, especially older youth aging out of foster care, go without needed health and mental health services.
Steps to address this issue include:
Better Data: An annual report should document progress in meeting the goal of permanent family connections for children nationally and by state, with data disaggregated by gender, age, race, ethnicity, family income, geographic setting, and special needs. See the article, Improve the nationa's data on children and families.