Division of Children, Youth and Families | New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
Do You See Anything Listed Here For Re-unification? I don't. There's plenty for Foster Stranger's though! Supposedly Reunification is the preferred permanency option. In your dreams!
Message from the Director
Welcome to the Division for Children Youth & Families (DCYF). DCYF is committed to being a responsive organization, providing up-to-date information on our services and programs.
Maggie Bishop
(603) 271-4440
mbishop@dhhs.state.nh.us
The Division for Children, Youth and Families manages protective programs on behalf of New Hampshire's children and youth and their families.
DCYF staff provide a wide range of family-centered services with the goal of meeting the needs of parents and their children and strengthening the family system. Services are designed to support families and children in their own homes and communities whenever possible. The major program areas of DCYF are:
Child Protection
The Bureau of Child Protection works to protect children from abuse and neglect while attempting to preserve the family unit. Child Protective Service Workers help prevent further harm to children from intentional physical or mental injury, sexual abuse, exploitation or neglect by a person responsible for a child's health or welfare.
Permanency
Permanency means that a child has a long term, safe, stable environment. This creates a lifelong relationship with a nurturing caregiver to establish the foundation for a child's health development. Permanency Workers are located in each District Office and are trained to assist children and their families to identify permanent, lifelong connections. Reunification is the preferred permanency option. When reunification is not possible, adoption, guardianship or another permanent living arrangement is sought.
Adolescents
The Adolescent program is designed to ensure that the current and former DCYF and DJJS youth obtain the preparation, resources and positive youth development they need to establish permanent connections and become healthy, self sufficient and successful adults. Adolescent workers with specialized training lead, educate and collaborate with youth, colleagues and the community to ensure the best practice for adolescents.
Foster Care
The Foster Care Program provides foster family homes and a family experience for children who cannot be safely cared for in their own homes. Specially trained Resource Workers in each DCYF District Office recruit, train and license foster families, and match children in need of out-of-home care with a foster family best suited to meet the specific needs of each child.
Foster Care Health Program (FCHP)
The Foster Care Health Program (FCHP) is committed to meeting the health care needs of children in out-of-home placement. Through healthcare coordination and consultation, children in DCYF out-of-home placements will receive the on-going care they need to achieve and maintain optimal physical, emotional and developmental health.
Adoption
The Adoption program provides an array of services to families who adopt children through DCYF. These services include:
Case management
Education
Information and referral
Financial assistance
Support groups
Assistance to adoptees searching for their birth families
Community and Family Supports
Community and Family Support Services provides services both to families in their communities, and to families that are involved with DCYF, including:
Funding for community-based programs that work to prevent child abuse and neglect, juvenile delinquency, and out-of-home placement of children and youth;
Clinical services and mental health support for children involved with DCYF;
Educational advocacy and support for children involved with DCYF.
Child Development Bureau
Provides technical assistance and support to early care and education programs
Provides consumer education and child care training programs to help develop and maintain child care programs
Maintains statistics on the supply and demand of child care throughout NH.
Develops policy for the NH child care scholarship program.
Through the scholarship program, parents may apply for payments to subsidize the cost of child care when needed to look for work, remain employed, or participate in training.
Head Start State Collaborative Office
The NH Head Start Collaboration Office fosters collaboration and teamwork among the Head Start community, and state and local public and private partners concerned with pregnant women and families of young children aged birth to five years. To improve long-term outcomes for income-eligible families, the Collaboration Office works closely with the NH Head Start Directors Association to support coordination of efforts in 10 priority areas:
Health care (mental health, oral health, physical health)
Child care
Family assistance (child welfare and family assistance)(two priority areas)
Early childhood education opportunities
Community services
Family literacy
Children with disabilities & their families
Education (transition & alignment with K- 12)
Services for children without homes
Program Information
Program Operations
Child Protection Services
Adolescent Program
Child Development
Clinical Services
Community & Family Support
Domestic Violence
Foster Care & Adoption
Incentive Fund Program
NH Child Care Advisory Council
Organizational Learning & Quality Improvement
Provider Services
Publications
Contact Children, Youth & Families
Related Resources
Child Protective Services Worker Realistic Job Preview Video
Hey Unhappy Grammy,
ReplyDeleteDid you read that article in the May 3, 2011 from NH Insider stating that NH DHHS recognizes May as foster care month? NH DHHS claims that approximately 53% of the children in foster care will reunify with their families and out of the approximately 47% that don't reunify, approximately 77% will be adopted to foster strangers!
I have difficulty believing that DHHS will reunify approximately 371 children out of the 700 children in foster care to their natural biological families, otherwise the family courts wouldn't be costing this state so much money! Could you please show me the statistics of the number of children in NH foster care, the percentage of children in NH foster care who are reunified with their families and the percentage of the children in NH foster care who are adopted out to other families?
And why is there only a Family Reunification Day for celebrating the biological families with their own children, when there's a whole month devoted to foster people? Don't the children's natural biological families deserve to have at least an entire month dedicated to them too? Wow, looking at how NH DHHS celebrates the fact that children are in foster homes really shows how serious they are about helping families. Just look at what NH DHHS has to say in that NH Insider article: "In honor of Foster Care Month, celebrations are being held around New Hampshire. A statewide event is being held May 14th at the Hampton Falls Baptist Church in Manchester. Jellystone Campground in New Hampton will also hold its annual camping weekend for foster families in early June. There are also other events scheduled including ice cream socials, dinners, picnics and even a trip to Storyland. A list of all activities can be found at New Hampshire’s Foster and Adoptive Parent Association website: nhfapa.org."
So here are devastated and traumatized families who are extremely unlikely to be reunified with their children and here are devastated and traumatized children who are extremely unlikely to be reunified with their families, and here's NH DHHS CELEBRATING, yah we stole children from their natural homes and yah we've placed these 700 children in unnatural and unfamiliar environments; Great Job! Let's make it a State-wide Party, OK? Let's go camping! Hey! Time to have picnics! Now is a GREAT TIME for ice cream socials, don't ya think?! And hey, let's have dinners-- and after dinner let's take a trip to Storyland! Is this supposed to be an example of keeping within NH DHHS' sub-company NH DCYF mission statement: "We are committed to the support of families, to ensure the protection of children and the communities they live. To accomplish this we will provide leadership and develop community collaboration in the creation of public policies and programs which strengthen and assist families. We are dedicated to providing services in the least restrictive manner possible while respecting the dignity of the families we service." Looks to me like NH DHHS respects the foster families and provides services for the foster families via community collaboration and considers foster homes as the communities where children live, while providing a load of dis-services biological families. I've never heard of NH DHHS holding a state wide celebration with ice cream socials, camping, trips to Storyland and dinners in honor of Family Reunification, have you? The only trip to Storyland that I've ever heard NH DHHS taking biological families on is "The Never Ending Story" of devastation and trauma and heartbreak because the family's child has been taken away......Anonymous
Nothing for Family Re-unification.
ReplyDeleteSTATE FOSTER CARE COUNT 2009 700,000 CHILDREN IN ONE YEAR
I wonder how many more there are in Foster care this year!
2009 V1 STATE FOSTER CARE RECORD COUNTS
Code
State
Records
Alabama
9,779
Alaska
3,081
AZ
Arizona
17,407
AR
Arkansas
7,574
CA
California
99,424
CO
Colorado
14,131
CT
Connecticut
7,733
DE
Delaware
1,369
DC
District of Columbia
2,814
FL
Florida
35,556
GA
Georgia
15,790
HI
Hawaii
2,902
ID
Idaho
2,898
IL
Illinois
22,956
IN
Indiana
20,885
IA
Iowa
11,251
KS
Kansas
9,306
KY
Kentucky
12,306
LA
Louisiana
8,469
ME
Maine
2,605
MD
Maryland
10,317
MA
Massachusetts
16,323
MI
Michigan
27,906
MN
Minnesota
11,693
MS
Mississippi
5,384
MO
Missouri
14,746
MT
Montana
2,578Code State Records
NE
Nebraska
8,962
NV
Nevada
7,871
NH
New Hampshire
1,488
NJ
New Jersey
13,227
NM
New Mexico
4,173
NY
New York
41,650
NC
North Carolina
14,515
ND
North Dakota
2,101
OH
Ohio
22,271
OK
Oklahoma
15,292
OR
Oregon
13,393
PA
Pennsylvania
29,385
PR
Puerto Rico
6,819
RI
Rhode Island
3,716
SC
South Carolina
8,636
SD
South Dakota
2,865
TN
Tennessee
12,937
TX
Texas
40,846
UT
Utah
4,725
VT
Vermont
1,709
VA
Virginia
9,287
WA
Washington
15,771
WV
West Virginia
7,276
WI
Wisconsin
11,708
WY
Wyoming
2,234
Total Records
700,040