Unbiased Reporting

What I post on this Blog does not mean I agree with the articles or disagree. I call it Unbiased Reporting!

Isabella Brooke Knightly and Austin Gamez-Knightly

Isabella Brooke Knightly and Austin Gamez-Knightly
In Memory of my Loving Husband, William F. Knightly Jr. Murdered by ILLEGAL Palliative Care at a Nashua, NH Hospital

Monday, March 1, 2010

Prison moms want more leeway in parental rights cases Bill sponsor hopeful Senate passage is near

Prison moms want more leeway in parental rights cases
Bill sponsor hopeful Senate passage is near

Note from unhappygrammy-This sounds like a good bill for NH seeing as parental rights are terminated every day due to the parents incarceration

By Faith Burkins-Gimzek

Assembly Corrections Committee Chairman Jeffrion Aubry emphasizes the importance of family as an incentive and support system for both parents who go to prison and their children. He is sponsoring a bill aimed at keeping families together when a member is incarcerated. Photo by Smita Bhooplapur, The Legislative Gazette.
March 01, 2010
The Senate seems poised to pass legislation this month that supporters say would help keep intact families separated by the criminal justice and child welfare systems.

Lawmakers, Office of Children and Family Services Commissioner Gladys Carrion and imprisoned women's rights advocates rallied outside the Senate Chamber Feb. 23 to support the Adoption and Safe Families Act Expanded Discretion Bill (S.2233-a/A.5462-a).

"I really am happy to be able to say to you that this legislation will definitely be passing in our house this session," said Sen. Velmanette Montgomery, chair of the Children and Families Committee and the bill's sponsor in the chamber.

"It will give families the fighting chance that they deserve to work towards rebuilding, to work towards keeping connections," said Tamar Kraft-Stolar, director of the Women in Prison Project for the Correctional Association of New York, which coordinated the Feb. 23 news conference. The Correctional Association has made passing this legislation one of its top priorities in its policy agenda for this year.

The Expanded Discretion bill would amend the Adoption and Safe Families Act, a federal law enacted in New York in 1999, which requires, with limited exceptions, foster care agencies to file a petition to terminate parental rights if a child has been in foster care for 15 of the previous 22 months.

Since a woman's median sentence in New York is 36 months, advocates of the bill say a majority of mothers are forced to give up their parental rights, often against the best interest of the child.

The bill has passed unanimously for two consecutive years in the Assembly and has now advanced to its third reading in the Senate.

It reached the Senate floor last session, but was never voted on because of the Senate coup last June.

The proposed legislation would increase a foster care agency's discretion in choosing whether to terminate parental rights and would give agencies the option of taking more time before filing termination of parental rights papers. The bill would also require courts to take into consideration the extenuating circumstances of a parent in the criminal justice system, making it easier for parents incarcerated or in residential substance abuse treatment to retain guardianship and custody of their children.

"[Current law] doesn't reflect the realities of the case and the time needed when the criminal justice system is involved," said Kraft-Stolar. She said there are, as the law stands, exceptions to the 15-month rule, but the exceptions are insufficient.

In the existing law's language, a foster care agency can delay filing termination papers if a child is placed with another family member, if the agency hadn't fulfilled its legal requirements to pursue reunification or if there is a "compelling reason" why it would not be in the best interest of the child to terminate parental rights. "There is some wiggle room … but not enough," Kraft-Stolar said.

According to the bill's justification, "In appropriate circumstances, caseworkers would have more time to work toward reunification or other permanent placements that do not involve severing family bonds forever." The bill memo also notes that this legislation would save the court system time and money by reducing the amount of costly termination hearings.

"What [the current law] does is it tips the balance inappropriately towards terminating parental rights in cases where a parent is in the criminal justice system, even when this outcome is not necessarily in the child's best interest and in the long-term interests of the family," Kraft-Stolar said.

Montgomery, D-Brooklyn, said many parents purposely avoid treatment because they are afraid of losing their children. "We want to make sure that parents can feel a sense of being … empowered as a parent, to be able to have a family when they come back. And that becomes an incentive, in fact, to be able to return as opposed to being a permanent prison person."

"[Incarcerated parent's] rights are terminated based on the fact that a parent's sentence is longer than the … law allows for them to be able to maintain their parental rights. Those children then get taken away, and the results of that are, in too many cases, those children also become part of the criminal justice system. We want to break that cycle," she said.

Assembly Corrections Committee Chairman Jeffrion Aubry, D-Queens, sponsor of the Assembly bill, emphasized the importance of family as an incentive and support system for those returning from prison or residential substance abuse treatment, and believes this bill will decrease re-internment. "We recognize that children are the unseen victims in this system," he said. "It works on both sides — it's good for the children, it's good for the parents."

Sen. Diane Savino, D-Staten Island, a co-sponsor of the bill, spoke from personal experience as a social worker with the state Child Welfare Association.

"There was something I had then that caseworkers today don't have," she said. "That was the discretion to make decisions based upon what I knew about the mother of that child, the relationship with that child, the level of planning and whether or not reunification would be successful. Caseworkers today don't have that discretion."

Mothers who had lost their children while incarcerated also spoke at the news conference, providing personal testimony as to the necessity of this legislation. The mothers spoke about the difficulties they faced maintaining contact with their children, and some reported child abuse occurring in foster care homes.

Brunilda Rivera, a Brooklyn mom who was imprisoned for 18 months, said her son was deprived of food and repeatedly locked in a room while in foster care. "Most kids want to be with their moms," she said. "It was a bad situation at home, but they put him in a worse situation.

"Even though it's an everyday struggle for us to get our lives together, to get clean and sober and to be a positive role model, we need a chance," she continued. "We definitely need a chance. We need someone to say, 'here, we're going to give you the hand you need and the proper steps to take so that you can be a better person and to be a better parent.'"

Her son, 13-year-old Brandon Rivera, said, "I'm glad that my mom is by my side right now helping other children get their moms back through passing this bill."

http://www.legislativegazette.com/Articles-c-2010-03-01-65767.113122_Prison_moms_want_more_leeway_in_parental_rights_cases.html

As You Slide Down the Banister of Life in 2010- Remember

Sent to me from my good friend Bobbi

As You Slide Down the Banister of Life in 2010- Remember

1. Transvestite: A guy who likes to eat, drink
And be Mary..

2. The difference between the Pope and Your boss,
the Pope only expects you to kiss his ring.

3. My mind works like lightning, one brilliant flash and it is gone.

4. The only time the world beats a path to your door is if you're in
the bathroom.

5. It used to be only death and taxes. Now, of course, there's
shipping and handling, too.

6. A husband is someone who, after taking the trash out, gives the
impression that he just cleaned the whole house.

7. My next house will have no kitchen - just vending machines and a
Large trash can.

8. As you slide down the banister of life, may the splinters never
Point the wrong way...

9. Be who you are and say what you feel!
Because those that matter, don't mind!
And those that mind, don't matter!

Handbook suggests that deviations from 'normality' are disorders

Handbook suggests that deviations from 'normality' are disorders

By George F. Will
Sunday, February 28, 2010

Peter De Vries, America's wittiest novelist, died 17 years ago, but his discernment of this country's cultural foibles still amazes. In a 1983 novel, he spotted the tendency of America's therapeutic culture to medicalize character flaws:

"Once terms like identity doubts and midlife crisis become current," De Vries wrote, "the reported cases of them increase by leaps and bounds." And: "Rapid-fire means of communication have brought psychic dilapidation within the reach of the most provincial backwaters, so that large metropolitan centers and educated circles need no longer consider it their exclusive property, nor preen themselves on their special malaises."

Life is about to imitate De Vries's literature, again. The fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), psychiatry's encyclopedia of supposed mental "disorders," is being revised. The 16 years since the last revision evidently were prolific in producing new afflictions. The revision may aggravate the confusion of moral categories.

Today's DSM defines "oppositional defiant disorder" as a pattern of "negativistic, defiant, disobedient and hostile behavior toward authority figures." Symptoms include "often loses temper," "often deliberately annoys people" or "is often touchy." DSM omits this symptom: "is a teenager."

This DSM defines as "personality disorders" attributes that once were considered character flaws. "Antisocial personality disorder" is "a pervasive pattern of disregard for . . . the rights of others . . . callous, cynical . . . an inflated and arrogant self-appraisal." "Histrionic personality disorder" is "excessive emotionality and attention-seeking." "Narcissistic personality disorder" involves "grandiosity, need for admiration . . . boastful and pretentious." And so on.



If every character blemish or emotional turbulence is a "disorder" akin to a physical disability, legal accommodations are mandatory. Under federal law, "disabilities" include any "mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities"; "mental impairments" include "emotional or mental illness." So there might be a legal entitlement to be a jerk. (See above, "antisocial personality disorder.")

The revised DSM reportedly may include "binge eating disorder" and "hypersexual disorder" ("a great deal of time" devoted to "sexual fantasies and urges" and "planning for and engaging in sexual behavior"). Concerning children, there might be "temper dysregulation disorder with dysphoria."

This last categorization illustrates the serious stakes in the categorization of behaviors. Extremely irritable or aggressive children are frequently diagnosed as bipolar and treated with powerful antipsychotic drugs. This can be a damaging mistake if behavioral modification treatment can mitigate the problem.

Another danger is that childhood eccentricities, sometimes inextricable from creativity, might be labeled "disorders" to be "cured." If 7-year-old Mozart tried composing his concertos today, he might be diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and medicated into barren normality.

Furthermore, intellectual chaos can result from medicalizing the assessment of character. Today's therapeutic ethos, which celebrates curing and disparages judging, expresses the liberal disposition to assume that crime and other problematic behaviors reflect social or biological causation. While this absolves the individual of responsibility, it also strips the individual of personhood and moral dignity.

James Q. Wilson, America's preeminent social scientist, has noted how "abuse excuse" threatens the legal system and society's moral equilibrium. Writing in National Affairs quarterly ("The Future of Blame"), Wilson notes that genetics and neuroscience seem to suggest that self-control is more attenuated -- perhaps to the vanishing point -- than our legal and ethical traditions assume.

The part of the brain that stimulates anger and aggression is larger in men than in women, and the part that restrains anger is smaller in men than in women. "Men," Wilson writes, "by no choice of their own, are far more prone to violence and far less capable of self-restraint than women." That does not, however, absolve violent men of blame. As Wilson says, biology and environment interact. And the social environment includes moral assumptions, sometimes codified in law, concerning expectations about our duty to desire what we ought to desire.

It is scientifically sensible to say that all behavior is in some sense caused. But a society that thinks scientific determinism renders personal responsibility a chimera must consider it absurd not only to condemn depravity but also to praise nobility. Such moral derangement can flow from exaggerated notions of what science teaches, or can teach, about the biological and environmental roots of behavior.

Or -- revisers of the DSM, please note -- confusion can flow from the notion that normality is always obvious and normative, meaning preferable. And the notion that deviations from it should be considered "disorders" to be "cured" rather than stigmatized as offenses against valid moral norms.

georgewill@washpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/26/AR2010022603369.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

Researchers Fail to Reveal Full Drug Pay

Researchers Fail to Reveal Full Drug Pay

By GARDINER HARRIS and BENEDICT CAREY

Published: June 8, 2008

A world-renowned Harvard child psychiatrist whose work has helped fuel an explosion in the use of powerful antipsychotic medicines in children earned at least $1.6 million in consulting fees from drug makers from 2000 to 2007 but for years did not report much of this income to university officials, according to information given Congressional investigators.


J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press
Senator Charles E. Grassley pushed three experts in child psychiatry at Harvard to expose their income from consulting fees.
Multimedia

Graphic
A Doctor’s Underreported Transactions

Dr. Joseph Biederman belatedly reported at least $1.6 million in consulting fees.
By failing to report income, the psychiatrist, Dr. Joseph Biederman, and a colleague in the psychiatry department at Harvard Medical School, Dr. Timothy E. Wilens, may have violated federal and university research rules designed to police potential conflicts of interest, according to Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa. Some of their research is financed by government grants.

Like Dr. Biederman, Dr. Wilens belatedly reported earning at least $1.6 million from 2000 to 2007, and another Harvard colleague, Dr. Thomas Spencer, reported earning at least $1 million after being pressed by Mr. Grassley’s investigators. But even these amended disclosures may understate the researchers’ outside income because some entries contradict payment information from drug makers, Mr. Grassley found.

In one example, Dr. Biederman reported no income from Johnson & Johnson for 2001 in a disclosure report filed with the university. When asked to check again, he said he received $3,500. But Johnson & Johnson told Mr. Grassley that it paid him $58,169 in 2001, Mr. Grassley found.

The Harvard group’s consulting arrangements with drug makers were already controversial because of the researchers’ advocacy of unapproved uses of psychiatric medicines in children.

In an e-mailed statement, Dr. Biederman said, “My interests are solely in the advancement of medical treatment through rigorous and objective study,” and he said he took conflict-of-interest policies “very seriously.” Drs. Wilens and Spencer said in e-mailed statements that they thought they had complied with conflict-of-interest rules.

John Burklow, a spokesman for the National Institutes of Health, said: “If there have been violations of N.I.H. policy — and if research integrity has been compromised — we will take all the appropriate action within our power to hold those responsible accountable. This would be completely unacceptable behavior, and N.I.H. will not tolerate it.”

The federal grants received by Drs. Biederman and Wilens were administered by Massachusetts General Hospital, which in 2005 won $287 million in such grants. The health institutes could place restrictions on the hospital’s grants or even suspend them altogether.

Alyssa Kneller, a Harvard spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement: “The information released by Senator Grassley suggests that, in certain instances, each doctor may have failed to disclose outside income from pharmaceutical companies and other entities that should have been disclosed.”

Ms. Kneller said the doctors had been referred to a university conflict committee for review.

Mr. Grassley sent letters on Wednesday to Harvard and the health institutes outlining his investigators’ findings, and he placed the letters along with his comments in The Congressional Record.

Dr. Biederman is one of the most influential researchers in child psychiatry and is widely admired for focusing the field’s attention on its most troubled young patients. Although many of his studies are small and often financed by drug makers, his work helped to fuel a controversial 40-fold increase from 1994 to 2003 in the diagnosis of pediatric bipolar disorder, which is characterized by severe mood swings, and a rapid rise in the use of antipsychotic medicines in children. The Grassley investigation did not address research quality.

Doctors have known for years that antipsychotic drugs, sometimes called major tranquilizers, can quickly subdue children. But youngsters appear to be especially susceptible to the weight gain and metabolic problems caused by the drugs, and it is far from clear that the medications improve children’s lives over time, experts say.

In the last 25 years, drug and device makers have displaced the federal government as the primary source of research financing, and industry support is vital to many university research programs. But as corporate research executives recruit the brightest scientists, their brethren in marketing departments have discovered that some of these same scientists can be terrific pitchmen.

To protect research integrity, the National Institutes of Health require researchers to report to universities earnings of $10,000 or more per year, for instance, in consulting money from makers of drugs also studied by the researchers in federally financed trials. Universities manage financial conflicts by requiring that the money be disclosed to research subjects, among other measures.

The health institutes last year awarded more than $23 billion in grants to more than 325,000 researchers at over 3,000 universities, and auditing the potential conflicts of each grantee would be impossible, health institutes officials have long insisted. So the government relies on universities.

Multimedia

Graphic
A Doctor’s Underreported Transactions
Universities ask professors to report their conflicts but do almost nothing to verify the accuracy of these voluntary disclosures.

“It’s really been an honor system thing,” said Dr. Robert Alpern, dean of Yale School of Medicine. “If somebody tells us that a pharmaceutical company pays them $80,000 a year, I don’t even know how to check on that.”

Some states have laws requiring drug makers to disclose payments made to doctors, and Mr. Grassley and others have sponsored legislation to create a national registry.

Lawmakers have been concerned in recent years about the use of unapproved medications in children and the influence of industry money.

Mr. Grassley asked Harvard for the three researchers’ financial disclosure reports from 2000 through 2007 and asked some drug makers to list payments made to them.

“Basically, these forms were a mess,” Mr. Grassley said in comments he entered into The Congressional Record on Wednesday. “Over the last seven years, it looked like they had taken a couple hundred thousand dollars.”

Prompted by Mr. Grassley’s interest, Harvard asked the researchers to re-examine their disclosure reports.

In the new disclosures, the trio’s outside consulting income jumped but was still contradicted by reports sent to Mr. Grassley from some of the companies. In some cases, the income seems to have put the researchers in violation of university and federal rules.

In 2000, for instance, Dr. Biederman received a grant from the National Institutes of Health to study in children Strattera, an Eli Lilly drug for attention deficit disorder. Dr. Biederman reported to Harvard that he received less than $10,000 from Lilly that year, but the company told Mr. Grassley that it paid Dr. Biederman more than $14,000 in 2000, Mr. Grassley’s letter stated.

At the time, Harvard forbade professors from conducting clinical trials if they received payments over $10,000 from the company whose product was being studied, and federal rules required such conflicts to be managed.

Mr. Grassley said these discrepancies demonstrated profound flaws in the oversight of researchers’ financial conflicts and the need for a national registry. But the disclosures may also cloud the work of one of the most prominent group of child psychiatrists in the world.

In the past decade, Dr. Biederman and his colleagues have promoted the aggressive diagnosis and drug treatment of childhood bipolar disorder, a mood problem once thought confined to adults. They have maintained that the disorder was underdiagnosed in children and could be treated with antipsychotic drugs, medications invented to treat schizophrenia.

Other researchers have made similar assertions. As a result, pediatric bipolar diagnoses and antipsychotic drug use in children have soared. Some 500,000 children and teenagers were given at least one prescription for an antipsychotic in 2007, including 20,500 under 6 years of age, according to Medco Health Solutions, a pharmacy benefit manager.

Few psychiatrists today doubt that bipolar disorder can strike in the early teenage years, or that many of the children being given the diagnosis are deeply distressed.

“I consider Dr. Biederman a true visionary in recognizing this illness in children,” said Susan Resko, director of the Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation, “and he’s not only saved many lives but restored hope to thousands of families across the country.”

Longtime critics of the group see its influence differently. “They have given the Harvard imprimatur to this commercial experimentation on children,” said Vera Sharav, president and founder of the Alliance for Human Research Protection, a patient advocacy group.

Many researchers strongly disagree over what bipolar looks like in youngsters, and some now fear the definition has been expanded unnecessarily, due in part to the Harvard group.

The group published the results of a string of drug trials from 2001 to 2006, but the studies were so small and loosely designed that they were largely inconclusive, experts say. In some studies testing antipsychotic drugs, the group defined improvement as a decline of 30 percent or more on a scale called the Young Mania Rating Scale — well below the 50 percent change that most researchers now use as the standard.

Controlling for bias is especially important in such work, given that the scale is subjective, and raters often depend on reports from parents and children, several top psychiatrists said.

More broadly, they said, revelations of undisclosed payments from drug makers to leading researchers are especially damaging for psychiatry.

“The price we pay for these kinds of revelations is credibility, and we just can’t afford to lose any more of that in this field,” said Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, executive director of the Stanley Medical Research Institute, which finances psychiatric studies. “In the area of child psychiatry in particular, we know much less than we should, and we desperately need research that is not influenced by industry money.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/08/us/08conflict.html?_r=2

Program Gives Parents Hope For A Second Chance To Raise Children

Special Report: Program Gives Parents Hope For A Second Chance To Raise Children

By Kim Genardo, NBC17, 4 days, 6 hours ago

Updated: Feb. 26 7:34 am
http://mync.com/site/48409/ WAKE COUNTY, N.C. -

More than 500 children in Wake County are curently in foster care and under the care of Child Protective Services.
There are many reasons parents lose custody of their biological children; drug or alcohol addictions, domestic violence, child abandonment, and financial pressures are just a few examples.
"Whenever it's safe, we want childen with their own families," said Alma Shelton of Wake County Human Services. "We believe children are better off when they can live safely with their own families."
Shelton oversees the new PUSH program, Parents United To Stay Hopeful, a parent advocacy program to help parents whose children were recently placed in foster care successfully reunite with their loved ones.
"The main thing is we're trying to encourage parents in a very difficult situation to know they can be succesful in reunifying with their children," said Shelton.
Michelle Richardson abandoned her newborn in a Zebulon McDonalds on Dec. 7, 2006.
She spent 13 days in jail on child abuse charges and then with the help of her attorney and social worker spent nearly one year working to regain custody of the son she left behind.
In her first television interview since the incident , Richardson told NBC 17 News: "I felt helpless. There was nothing I could do. I felt like my heart had been ripped out of my chest because of a bad decision I had made. I couldn't change it, all I could do was move from that day forward to bring me to who I am now for myself and my kids."
She delined to comment further other than to characterize her bad decision by saying: "it was mentality."
Today she is a single mother of three children, including the baby she adandoned. Richardson is also helping other parents figure out the child welfare system.
She is a Parent Partner in the PUSH program and receives a part-time stipend for educating struggling parents about their rights, and helping them better deal with social workers, foster parents and other service providers.
"They may be in the system like I was, the first time in the system with no idea what to expect," explained Richardson. "So as a reunified birth parent we have the knowledge to pass on to other parents that we learned from our experience to help them reunify and be able to reunify quicker."
Richardson leads monthly parent orientation groups along with a Wake County Human Services employee at South Central Church of Christ in Raleigh.
"Our parent partners have credibility," said program manager Alma Shelton. "In other words, they've walked in the shoes of the parents who are new to us (Wake County Human Services)."
In just four months time, a dozen parents have successfully completed the 3-session Parent Orientation Group meetings. They receive a certificate to present to the judge in their case.
It's only one step toward reunification, ultimately parents must prove to Child Protective Services they can provide a safe and stable environment for thier biological children.
Shelton said of the program, "We believe it's a strategy to help parents who are in dire circumstances and struggling. Basically we believe in parents and I believe in families."
It took Parent Partner Maxcine Bland of Raleigh two-and-a-half years to regain custody of her three children after a long battle with drug addiction.
"I want parents to know you never have to walk alone. You never have to walk alone during this process," said Bland.
Both Bbland and Richardson got their second chance and now both women want to give other struggling parents hope they'll get their second chance too.
However, Shelton said the grant money for the PUSH program will run out by the end of this year.
They run the program on the cheap based on a stipend model. Parent Partners like Richardson recieve $12.50 per hour for their part-time work. Shelton is seeking financial support to hire a program coordinator.
Shelton estimates they may be able to help 50 additional parents in orientation groups and 200 people with training sessions before the funding runs out.
Watch our NBC 17 News special report in the video monitor above, as well as Parent Partners Michelle Richardson and Maxcine Bland in their own words.

http://wake.mync.com/site/wake/news/story/48409/program-gives-parents-hope-for-a-second-chance-to-raise-children

Equal Justice Foundation

Please visit the Equal Justice Foundation web-site

Areas of Interest
Civilization
Courts & Civil Liberties
Families and Marriage
Domestic Violence
Prohibitions & War On Drugs
Vote Fraud & Election Issues
Domestic Violence Against Men in Colorado
Emerson story — 2nd Amendment
Have charges of domestic violence or abuse been made against you, or someone you know or love? Whether you are a man or woman dvmen.org will provide information essential to the survival of you and your children.
The Equal Justice Foundation is a nonprofit organization of citizens from all walks of life working to:
• Restore due process.
• Reverse the loss of our civil liberties.
• Ensure equality for all citizens before the bar.
• Establish judicial accountability.
• Reestablish the rule of law.
• Preserve the secret ballot.
• Ensure open, fair, and honest elections.
• Make the Bill of Rights a living document in our time.
Our viewpoints and findings are presented by an eclectic array of male and female authors from a wide variety of fields, backgrounds, and viewpoints.
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The Equal Justice Foundation believes:
• Citizens should not be torn from their homes and children in the middle of the night based on nothing more than hearsay.
• Men and women should not be presumed guilty until they can prove their innocence.
• A secret tribunal should not have the power to force a man from his home without notice or hearing.
• Police should not have the right to enter and search a citizen's home without a warrant.
• Citizens should not be imprisoned based only on hearsay.
• Citizens should not be more afraid of the police than they are of criminals.
• A legal system that tolerates perjury and the subornation of perjury can not produce justice.
• Men should not be censured by public officials for crimes they have not committed.
• Men and women should not be made to work as indentured servants or held in thrall to others for acts they have not committed.
These actions are occurring in America everyday. If you haven't yet personal experience with such sordid injustices we invite you to explore the following pages. Look at the evidence and laws behind these despicable acts. You will find numerous personal stories of men and women who have suffered under these draconian policies, often losing everything they loved and owned in the process. The persecution of Dr. Tim Emerson is but one contemptible example. See why so many find suicide their only escape. And join the Equal Justice Foundation in providing help and succor to many desperate men and women.

Basic Findings
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Make no mistake, we are engaged in an epic battle between two incompatible ideologies with fundamentally different views of the rights of the individual and the power of the state, with the future of civilization at stake.
In studying the problems of children, families, and marriage that are the bedrock of our society, some simple facts emerge from study after study:
• The safest place for a child is with their biological father.
• The safest place for a woman is in her home married to the biological father of her children.
• Men and women are equally violent in domestic relationships.
• "Any country that has tried to create a political solution to human problems has ended up with concentration camps and gulags." (Erin Pizzey)
Yet radical ideologues have successfully campaigned to pass laws that contravene these findings and act to destroy children, families, and marriages on a previously unimagined scale. No one of us can combat these evils, but standing together we can, and have made a difference.
These are not battles that will be won overnight and victory will never be complete. But we are turning the tide on repression and darkness. Please join us, for your sake, and the sake of your children.

Research Areas
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The essays, papers, articles, and illustrative vignettes of the research areas of interest to the Equal Justice Foundation are organized into six general areas:
• Civilization — the umbrella under which we currently exist but that is under attack.
• Families and Marriage — the basic building blocks of civilization that extremists want to destroy.
• Domestic Violence — family violence has become a tool in the hands of ideologues for the destruction of families and marriage. To provide balance the EJF also maintains and supports the Domestic Violence Against Men In Colorado web site. The Emerson story tells how the life of one medical doctor was destroyed by these draconian laws but we know of many more professionals whose careers have been destroyed by false allegations.
• Courts and Civil Liberties — the crusaders attempting to destroy families and marriage depend heavily on corrupt "family" courts and the destruction of civil liberties to achieve their objectives.
• Prohibitions and War On Drugs — tyrants have always depended on distractions to accomplish their goals and for the denial of civil liberties.
• Vote Fraud and Election Issues — the federally-funded stampede to computer voting and mail in elections has greatly enhanced the potential for election fraud and undermined the faith of citizen's in their elections. The EJJF has been at the forefront, documenting the problems of incompetent and dishonest election officials and voting machine vendors.

Federal Employees In Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah
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In Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah federal employees can contribute through the Combined Federal Campaign.
The Equal Justice Foundation agency number is 18855.



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UASFA: Has the pendulum swung to the point of sense or nonsense?

March 1, 2010 yvonnemason

Kate Chester

Lawoffice@connectNC.net

UASFA: Has the pendulum swung to the point of sense or nonsense?

“The pendulum of the mind oscillates between sense and nonsense, not between right and wrong.” Carl G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections 154 (1989 Vintage ed.).
UBackground and Historical Context
The Adoption and Safe Families Act [ASFA] was passed by Congress with wide bipartisan support, in 1997. The Department of Health and Human Services was tasked with the responsibility of turning the new law into regulations for implementation. The ASFA regulations went into effect on 27 March 2000. The law is extremely complex, and there are exceptions to many of the basic rules. Although this paper sets out the most important features of ASFA, any attorney practicing in this area should read the law carefully and in depth, and study materials which have been published to explain the law.
ASFA was not, by far, the first attempt which had been made to address the problem of children whose parents had either become unable to care for them, or who had allegedly abused or neglected them. The history of child welfare in America is best symbolized by a pendulum which swings between two opposing viewpoints: one which believes that when a child’s own parents cannot take care of him/her, the child should be given to someone who, ostensibly, can do a better job; and the viewpoint which says that families are important, and should be preserved whenever possible. Under the latter paradigm, it is in the best interests of the child for the parent(s) to be given assistance and some reasonable amount of time to see if they can become better able to take care of their own children. The first group believes that the safety of the child should be the paramount consideration; the second group believes that more children can be safe in their own homes, and that children fare better when they are given an opportunity to maintain their bonds with their parents and their community. Underlying both philosophies is a strong foundation of Constitutional law which has consistently held that parents have fundamental rights to the care, custody, and control of their own children,TPD7DPT while also recognizing that parental rights are not absolute.TPD8DPT
When the history of ‘child-saving’ is recounted, the story of Mary Ellen is usually told. Legend has it that in 1875, a New York City child named Mary Ellen Wilson was defended by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, because she had been abused by her mother, and there were laws on the books to protect animals, but not children.

In reality, New York had had a law against child abuse since 1833, and the woman accused of beating her was not her mother, but a woman with whom Mary Ellen had been sent to live. Mary Ellen was an illegitimate child, and had been placed by the New York City Department of Charities – - a precursor of today’s foster care – - as an indentured servant. She was supposedly under supervision of the Board of Charities when the abuse occurred.TPD10DPT
From the late 19th century to the early 20th century, as many as 200,000 “orphans” were shipped to the mid-west as part of a plan called the “placing out system.” Charles Loring Brace, a minister and forerunner of the social work profession, considered the children of immigrants – - particularly offspring of the Italian and Irish Catholic – - to be racially inferior. He opined that, if these children were removed quickly enough from their “depraved” parents, and placed in rural areas with Protestant families, they might rise above the “inferior culture” into which they had been born, and become responsible citizens.TPD11DPT
Aside from the inherent bigotry, and other glaringly obvious issues and problems with this ’system,’ data from historical research indicates that approximately 30-44% of these children were not orphans at all, but had at least one living parent.TPD12DPT Allegations were made of child-stealing, and lurking under the more overt appeal to Christian charity was a subtext of free labor, as many of the children who were sent west were used as free farm labor.TPD13DPT
To some extent, the ‘placing out system’ was a reaction to the institutionalization of children in orphanages. One hundred years before the case of Mary Ellen, New York City had opened one of the nation’s first poorhouses.TPD14DPT Early on, orphaned children were often housed along with the aged and the insane. By the end of the 19PthP century, some estimate that 100,000 children were living in children’s orphanages.TPD15DPT The pendulum swung between attempting to keep children near their families, communities, and roots by placing them in orphanages, or sending them away to new homes.
Around the turn of the century, the federal government began to take notice and to involve itself in the welfare of America’s children. In 1909, the White House Conference on the Care of Dependent Children was held.TPD16DPT The conference asserted that poverty alone did not make a parent unfit. It led to the establishment of a significant government support program which came to be known as the “Mother’s Pension,” or the “Widow’s Pension,” based on the tenet that “family life . . . is sapped in its foundations when the mothers of young children work for wages.”TPD17DPT The 1934 Social Security Act was an outgrowth, and included Title IV, which created Aid to Dependent Children, which in 1964 became Aid to Families with Dependent Children [AFDC].TPD18DPT
A radical change in the way child welfare was approached came in the early 1960’s. In 1961, the term, “battered child syndrome” was coined, and physicians established that a child could continue to suffer physically and emotionally long after bruises and broken bones had appeared to heal.TPD19DPT By 1966, all 50 states had passed legislation requiring doctors and other health care workers to report suspected cases of child abuse.
In 1974, Congress passed the Federal Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act. States were required to strengthen mandatory reporting laws or lose federal money. Courts around the nation were flooded with parents accused of intentionally injuring their children.TPD21DPT A philosophical dichotomy emerged between those who believed that children should be protected by being removed from unsafe and potentially unsafe families, opposed by civil libertarians who believed that, “in the haste to ferret out abuse[,] the rights of children and families were being trampled.”TPD22DPT
By 1977, there were in excess of 500,000 children in foster care in the United States.TPD23DPT In response to those rising numbers, in 1980, Congress passed the Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act [AACWA].TPD24DPT
AACWA attempted to strike a balance between keeping children safe from abuse while at the same time preventing the unnecessary severing of children from their families of origin and their communities. The federal government provided funding to help states pay for both adoption and reunification costs, not just foster care.TPD25DPT The law required courts to make findings that leaving a child with his/her parent(s) was “contrary to the welfare” of the child, and that “reasonable efforts” had been made to prevent removal.TPD26DPT
Critics of AACWA claimed that it placed too much emphasis on family preservation and reunification, and as a result, caused children to languish endlessly in foster care while their parents were given limitless time in which to cure alleged ills. They believed that under AACWA, children’s safety could not be ensured. AACWA supporters, on the other hand, saw children not as sole individuals, but as members of families and communities. They insisted that troubled families deserved an opportunity to try and reunify, and that diligent efforts should be made by the government to help them; but they also reluctantly conceded that once efforts had been made and had failed, children should then be freed for adoption. Within 2 years of the passage of AACWA, the number of children in foster care was cut almost in half from the 1977 figure.TPD27DPT
But, in the early years of the Reagan administration, there were broad-scale reductions in government spending on social welfare programs.TPD28DPT The Reagan administration attempted to get AACWA repealed, but when that failed, it dramatically cut funding for family preservation and reunification services, but placed no cap on foster care subsidies.TPD29DPT In 1989, the federal government spent more than $1 billion on foster care, but no more than $124 million on preventive services.TPD30DPT By 1994, foster care roles had dramatically increased, to more than 465,000 children. TPD31DPT
So before AACWA was given any reasonable chance of success, the pendulum swung once more, away from the focus on family preservation, and making reasonable efforts at reunifying troubled families, and towards safety as the primary goal. Richard Gelles, a professor of sociology at the University of Rhode Island, was one of the advocates of swinging the pendulum back in the ’safety’ direction. He wrote a landmark book called, UThe Book of DavidU, in which he describes the horror of coming to believe that a small boy was
preservation/reunification and not cognizant enough of safety and the need to protect children from abusive parents.TPD32DPT He had previously been an advocate of family preservation, but changed his mind as a result of a case he referred to as the “David Edwards case.” He asserted that the family preservation model was a failure, that too many children died as a result, and it was necessary to “put children first.”TPD33DPT
Calling for a new “Child-centered Policy,” Gelles stated that,
The essential first step in creating a safe world for children is to abandon the fantasy that child welfare agencies can balance the goals of protecting children and preserving families, adopting instead a child-centered policy of family services. This is not a new policy, but rather a return to the policy of the early 1960s that established child safety as the overriding goal of the child welfare system.
If we have learned anything in the past thirty years, it is that we cannot achieve the delicate balance between keeping abused children safe and keeping them with their parents. The data we have on child welfare interventions support a child-centered policy that aims at reducing the risk for children and matching interventions to their needs. More important, the interventions must be applied efficiently enough that children do not languish in administrative limbo while court cases drag on.TPD34DPT
On the opposing side, Richard Wexler has been among the strongest proponents of giving family preservation a reasonable chance. Wexler, author of UWounded Innocents: The Real Victims of the War Against Child AbuseU, wrote the following in a law journal article, highly critical of policies put into play by ASFA:
ASFA was the culmination of an assault on safe, effective programs to keep families together that began in the 1990’s. The law has caused untold misery for thousands of children. While supposedly intended to solve the problems of the foster care system, it has, in fact, worsened those problems. In the name of promoting adoption, it is creating a generation of legal orphans. And worst of all, in the name of child safety, it has made children less safe.
There is nothing really new about the ASFA approach. Its guiding philosophy can be boiled down to a single sentence: “take the child and run.”TPD35DPT
As is often the case, the truth probably lies somewhere in between. There ought to be a way, in the 21PstP Century, in the wealthiest nation on earth, to both keep most children safe most of the time, AND, at the same time, to preserve most families most of the time. The balance of this manuscript will focus on the most important features and requirements ofASFA, and how the current interpretation and application of the regulations appear to be having draconian consequences, especially for those living in poverty and for children of color. Some of the promises of ASFA have been realized; other goals either been not
realized, or have been achieved at the price of unnecessarily destroying families bonds.
UKey Provisions of ASFA
The primary goals of ASFA were to:
(1) shift the emphasis from making efforts to reunify families to ensuring that
children were safe;
(2) achieve permanent homes more quickly, that is decrease the amount of time
which children spend in foster care and move them more quickly either back
to their own homes or into adoptive homes; and
(3) increase the number of adoptions from the pool of children in foster care who are
available for adoption.TPD36DPT
To achieve those goals, ASFA set time restrictions which states have to meet in order to receive Title IV reimbursement money from the federal government.TPD37DPT The federal government reimburses state governments for approximately 65% of their foster care costs.TPD38DPT
Under ASFA, the following deadlines must be met in order for states to receive their federal funding:
• Within 60 days from the date upon which the child is removed from his/her home,
a Case Plan must be established.TPD39DPT
The term “case plan” means a written document which includes at least the
following: “a plan assuring that the child receives safe and proper care and
that Uthe services are provided to parentsU, child and foster parents Uin order to
Uimprove conditions in the parents’ home, facilitate return of the child to his
Uown safe homeU”TPD40DPT
• In the very first court order, the court must make a finding that “continuation in the
home is contrary to the welfare of the child.”
“Contrary to the welfare findings must be ‘detailed’ and be in the court order or
hearing transcript. Affidavits, nunc pro tunc orders, or orders simply referringto a state law requiring such findings for removal do not meet this
requirement.”TPD41DPT
• Within 60 days from the date upon which the child is removed from his/her home,
the court must make a finding that “reasonable efforts have been made to
prevent the child’s removal from home.TPD42DPT
Under certain circumstances, reasonable efforts need not be made. For example, reasonable efforts need not be made when removal is necessary because there is no way to ensure the child’s safety while providing services.TPD43DPT
• Within 6 months of the date upon which the child “enters foster care,” a six-moth
periodic review must be held. The date on which the child entered foster care
is one of the following, which ever occurred first:
(a) the date upon which the court found the child to be abused or neglected;
(b) 60 days after the child’s actual removal from his/her home.TPD44DPT
• Within 12 months of the date upon which the child enters foster care, the court
must make a finding that the agency has made reasonable efforts to finalize a
permanent plan.TPD45DPT
“Reasonable efforts findings must be detailed – they must include relevant
case facts. These findings must be in the court order or hearing
transcript. Affidavits, nunc pro tunc orders, and orders simply referring
to state laws requiring reasonable efforts for removal do not meet the
requirement . . . The exact wording of the federal statute does not have to be used as long as the findings make clear that the agency made reasonable efforts.”TPD46DPT
Judicial determinations that reasonable efforts have been made are considered “important safeguard(s) against inappropriate agency action” which are not supposed to become “a mere pro forma exercise in paper shuffling to obtain Federal funding.”TPD47DPT While specific terminology need not be used, “[i]t must be clear, however, that the court really determined that the agency actually made reasonable efforts.”TPD48DPT
• If the child remains in foster care for 15 out of 22 months, the agency MUST file a
termination petition.TPD49DPT Additionally, if a court determines that a child is an
abandoned infant, or has been convicted of a particular felony,TPD50DPT then the agency must file the Petition within 60 days of the date on which the finding is
made.TPD51DPT
These are the only points in time, and the only circumstances under which an agency is REQUIRED to file a TPR Petition. This latter deadline – - mandating that an agency must file a termination petition if the child remains out of his/her home for the previous 15 out of 22 months – - is the most radical and controversial of the ASFA provisions.
UThe Problems with ASFA
First of all, ASFA is built on a false premise. Statistics show that adoptions climbed steadily through the 1990’s, before ASFA was implemented.TPD52DPT So it was not necessary to implement ASFA in order to increase adoptions. Adoptions decreased in 2001, increased slightly in 2002, but then dropped again in 2003.TPD53DPT
The pool of children available for adoptions is constantly being refilled as terminations increase. It is common knowledge that younger children are more likely to be adopted. Children of color are less likely to be adopted than Caucasian children. If states continue to terminate parents’ rights at a faster rate than adoptive homes can be found for children, are we doing much more than using the law to bastardize children who could have gone home, safely – - and perhaps more quickly – - had their parents had been provided a little assistance and a little more time? In 2002, there were 67,000 terminations and 53,000 adoptions, nationwide; in 2003, terminations increased to 68,000, but adoptions dropped to 49,000.TPD54DPT
A second false premise is the assumption that children must be safer in foster care than they are with their own families. The fact is, no adult – - parent or foster caregiver – - can guarantee a child’s safety 100% of the time. As our Supreme Court held in UIn re StumboU,
On this record, we have a report of a circumstance that probably happens repeatedly across our state, where a toddler slips out of a house without the awareness of the parent or caregiver — no matter how conscientious or diligent the parent or care giver might be. While no one wants that to happen, such a lapse does not in and of itself constitute “neglect” under N.C.G.S. § 7B-101. However, a single report of a naked, unsupervised two-year-old in the driveway of her home does not trigger the investigative requirements of N.C.G.S. § 7B-302.TPD55DPT
Placement in FC does not guarantee safety. In November 2000, Time Magazine published the results of an investigation which they had conducted, in an article called, “The Crisis of Foster Care.” In the article, the author stated that,
Many foster parents . . .continue to act selflessly as important way stations for at-risk kids while their biological parents get their lives together. However, neglect and a quagmire of child-swallowingbureaucracies plague the system. And the incidence of neglect, physical and sexual abuse of children in the various foster-care systems is feared to be significantly higher than the incidence in the general population. Nobody bothers to keep an accurate count, but in round numbers, more than 7,500 children are tortured under what is technically government protection.TPD56DPT
The National Coalition for Child Protection Reform has found statistics to support the
conclusion that children are always not safe in foster care: a child is twice as likely to die from abuse suffered in foster care as in the general population. NCCPR cites studies which show that in Baltimore, the rate of substantiated cases of sexual abuse was more than four times higher in foster care than in the general population. A study of foster children in Oregon and Washington state found that nearly 1/3 of the children reported being abused by a foster parent or other adult in a foster home.TPD57DPT
Beyond the flawed premise behind ASFA, the problems with the law tend to fall into two categories. There are both inherent flaws, flaws in the way ASFA was written; and there are also flaws in the way ASFA is applied. The most troubling aspect of the way ASFA is structured is that state governments are paid to adopt children out; no incentives are paid for placing a child in any other permanent home, including back with their parents.
ASFA was intended to encourage adoption, so it was written to provide adoption incentive payments to states. A baseline was established for each state, based on an average of the number of adoptions which took place between 1995 and 1997. States receive a bonus for each child adopted above the baseline in a given year. “Regular” children are worth $4,000; special needs children are worth $6,000. TPD58DPT In some cities and counties, quotas have been imposed.TPD59DPT
As soon as money enters the picture, conflict of interest – - or at least the potential for conflict of interest – - becomes possible. There are no incentive payments or awards for achieving any other permanent plan for a child. Specifically, there is no financial incentive for reuniting children with their own parents. For example, if a sibling-group of 3 children will bring an $18,000 bonus to North Carolina, and a social worker is sitting on the fence trying to decide whether to recommend either reunification or adoption, isn’t there at least the possibility that the money will influence her decision? When deciding where children should live, money shouldn’t be the deciding factor. Bonuses should either be eliminated, or should be given not just for adoption, but for achieving any safe permanent home for a child, regardless of what the permanent plan is.
A second problem with ASFA is that the term ‘reasonable efforts’ is not defined. The law does not provide a list or even any guidelines for what types of efforts are reasonable. Consequently, when social workers draft so-called ‘reasonable efforts reports,’ they are often replete with items such as, “took Junior to the dentist.” Taking Junior to the dentist is not a reasonable effort towards reunifying a family; it is something the government must dounder the parens patriae doctrine because the state has taken away the parent’s chance to do it.
Another problem inherent in ASFA is that it treats the cases of abused children the same
way it treats cases which involve neglected children. Intentional abuse is a different problem from neglect. Abuse cases should be fast-tracked, and ASFA makes some provision for that, under limited circumstances.TPD60DPT In 2002, the federal government determined that of the approximately 35,000 children reported as maltreated, approximately 90% were
substantiated for neglect, and about 7% were substantiated for abuse.TPD61DPT
This failure to separate abuse of children from neglect of children, and to treat them distinctly differently, however, is at the very root of the argument between the “safety at the expense of family preservation” advocates, and the “family preservation at the expense of safety” advocates. That children should be safe is a given. But how much consideration is ever given to the damage which is done to children by removing them from the only parent(s) they have ever known? “Think for a moment what it means to rip children from their parents and their brothers and sisters and place them in the care of strangers . . . . Tearing children from their parents almost always leaves emotional scars.”TPD62DPT
Putting children in foster care does not guarantee their safety. And although those of us who represent parent-respondents are inevitably focussed on the rights of our clients, don’t children have a right to know their parents, especially when many parents are ‘guilty’ of nothing more than being economically disadvantaged?
Neglect, as opposed to abuse, is not usually the result of intentional acts, and more often than not, is driven by poverty. Parents who are already struggling because of poverty-related issues should not be further victimized by having their children removed. When children and their parent(s) are living in poverty, then genuine reasonable efforts should be made to keep the family together, a reasonable spectrum services should be provided, and a reasonable amount of time should be allowed for them to make their home environment safe. ASFA does not address the root cause of why most children enter foster care, which is because of poverty-related issues.
In the year 2000, nearly 20% of North Carolina’s children were living in poverty.TPD63DPT “Poverty is confused with neglect . . . because ‘it often comes packaged with depression and anger, poor nutrition and housekeeping, lack of education, and medical care, leaving children alone, exposing children to improper influences.’”TPD64DPT
Parents who are actively working to regain custody of their children should not have their rights terminated based on the children being in foster care for 15 out of 22 months. It is somewhere between totally unrealistic and impossible for parent(s) living in poverty to overcome the multiple issues which they face in such a short period of time. Often they are told they have only a year – - not 15 months – - to: “find and maintain stable housing,” “find and maintain stable employment”; get a substance abuse assessment and follow allrecommendations; overcome addiction; attend parenting classes; attend counseling/training sessions for domestic violence; get a psychological evaluation and follow all recommendations. These are common case plan goals, which parents are frequently expected to complete in 12 months. How can anyone maintain stable housing or employment in one year’s time (or less)? especially when, more often than not, no reasonable effort at all is being made to assist them.
Too often, parental rights are being terminated in cases like these:
(1) the parent failed to complete her case plan; the mother lived in a rural area, and
could not afford a telephone. She could use a neighbor’s phone for emergencies, but
the case plan required her to call the social worker 3 times a week. When the
neighbor got tired of the mother using the phone so often, the mother had to walk 3
miles to get to a pay phone. She could not do it 3 times a week. By ‘failing to stay in
touch with the social worker,” she failed to comply with the case plan.
(2) the parents were temporarily living in their car; no, of course that is not a good
environment in which to raise children. But both parents had only worked factory
jobs, and the factory in which they had worked closed. The solution was not to take
the children away; the solution was to help the family find safe, affordable housing.
The parents looked for work but could not find jobs. They received no assistance
with job training, seeking employment, or seeking housing. Their rights to their 3
children were terminated.
(3) Mother smoked marijuana. Yes, of course it is illegal and wrong. However, she
never smoked it in front of her two sons. There was no evidence that her marijuana
use had any affect on the children. She had used it infrequently for many years, and
had never ‘graduated’ to crack/cocaine/heroine. She was told she had one year to
recover from her “addiction.” She was put on a waiting list, and could not get into a
substance abuse treatment program for 3 months. The brochure from the treatment
program says that it cannot be completed in a year, and most people take 2 years.
Her rights were terminated because she failed to complete her case plan in a year.
(4) House was “cluttered,” with piles of clothing left on beds, and dishes in the sink.
Children were removed due to an ‘injurious environment, and adjudicated to be
neglected.
(5) “Instability;” mother could not afford to buy a car, and could not afford auto
insurance. She worked minimum-wage jobs, and was a single parent while her
husband was incarcerated. She could not keep any one particular job for any length
of time because she lacked reliable transportation. Because she could not maintain
stable employment, she moved frequently. Her rights to her son, who was 6 months
old when he was removed from her care, were terminated when the child was 22
months old because the mother had not corrected the conditions which led to
removal.
Fifteen months is simply not a reasonable period of time in which to fix the long laundry-list of problems often seen in case plans, many of which have no impact on the child, and have nothing to do with making sure children are safe. For example, “instability” – - moving frequently – - almost certainly had less negative impact on the 6-month-old baby than removing him from his mother/primary caregiver did. If instability is a ground for termination, then the rights of nearly every parent serving in the military would need to be terminated.
ASFA has had a disproportionate impact on families of color. Dorothy Roberts, professor at Northwestern University School of Law, and author of UShattered Bonds: The Color of Child WelfareU, asserts that white children who are abused or neglected are twice as likely as Black children to receive in-home services, while Black children are far more likely to be removed from their homes.TPD65DPT Once in foster care, Black children tend to remain there longer than white children. “Nearly half of while children who are placed in foster care return home within three months; very few Black children do.”TPD66DPT
Statistics maintained by the federal Administration for Children and Families show that in North Carolina, in 2002, (the most recent year for which such statistics have been released,) Black children made up 25.9% of the population of children under 18, while on 30 September 2002, 44.7% of the children in foster care were Black. For the same year, 62.2% of children under 18 in North Carolina were White, but 45.5% of the children in foster care were White. So, even though there were approximately 2.5 times as many white children as Black living in North Carolina, there were roughly equal numbers of Black and White children in foster care. Of children waiting to be adopted, 47.2% were Black, while only 43.3% were White.TPD67DPT
As stated above, there are also flaws in the way ASFA is applied. First of all, states are free to shorten the deadlines imposed by ASFA. For example, in North Carolina, one ground for a terminating a parent’s rights to his/her children is if the parent “has willfully left the juvenile in foster care or placement outside the home for more than 12 months without showing to the satisfaction of the court that reasonable progress has been made in correcting those conditions which led to removal . . . . “TPD68DPT
ASFA does not require termination under those circumstances; ASFA only requires that social services file a termination Petition if the child has been in placement in state-sponsored foster care for 15 out of the previous 22 months. Further, under ASFA, a child does not “enter foster care” on the date when s/he is removed from his/her parents’ home. A child enters foster care on either (a) the date upon which the court found the child to be abused or neglected; or (b) 60 days after the child’s actual removal from his/her home.TPD69DPT Therefore, under ASFA, a parent actually has 17 months to turn his or her life around, while North Carolina only allows that parent 12 months.
Further, the Petitioner is supposed to bear the burden of proving, by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence, that grounds exist for termination.TPD70DPT Yet, under the ground fortermination cited above, the burden is shifted to the parent; the parent must prove to the court’s satisfaction that s/he has corrected the conditions which led to removal.
It also appears clear that in many cases, no reasonable efforts are being made at all. As stated above,TPD71DPT ASFA UrequiresU reasonable efforts to be made; it is one of the foundational assumptions on which ASFA is built. In a recent case, a social worker stated that the Department had provided “extensive services.” But when cross examined by the mother’s attorney, the social worker testified that the mother had been ineligible for emergency financial assistance because the children had been removed, and that the only services which had been provided to the mother was that the Department had drafted a case plan, and that a social worker had given the mother occasional rides to visit with her son, since she did not own a car, and did not have access to public transportation. No reasonable efforts report was included in the court file.TPD72DPT In the author’s experience, this is fairly typical.
As stated above, findings that reasonable efforts have been made were considered “important safeguard(s) against inappropriate agency action,” and were not supposed to become “a mere pro forma exercise in paper shuffling to obtain Federal funding.”TPD73DPT Yet that is exactly what it has become in many cases in North Carolina. After examination of many court files and transcripts, it is this author’s experience that most findings that agencies have made reasonable efforts at reunification are not supported by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence.
An essential key to reunification between children and their parents is sufficient visitation.
Visitation between parents and children in out-of-home placements is vital. Studies show visitation is the most important factor in the reunification process. . . . In addition to assisting in visitation, the caseworker should be making consistent efforts to facilitate a meaningful relationship between parent and child. This includes regularly informing the parent about the child’s progress, and including the parent in health and educational decisions.TPD74DPT
Yet, in North Carolina cases, parents are frequently restricted to one hour a week of supervised visitation a week, even when the permanent plan for the child is to return home. Making reasonable efforts at reunification should include liberal visits between parents and children.
UHow are North Carolina’s Foster Children Faring Under ASFA?
In April of 2004, the New York Times published an article stating that Federal investigators had found widespread problems in the implementation of ASFA. The article stated that, “No state fully complies with standards established by the federal government to assess performance in protecting children and finding safe, permanent homes for those who havesuffered abuse or neglect.”TPD75DPT Further, there are 14 standards, 7 of which “focus on the safety and well-being of children, including the incidence of abuse and neglect, the time they spend in foster care and the stability of their living arrangements.” Sixteen states failed to meet all of those 7 standards, and one of the states which failed is North Carolina.
The 7 “outcome areas” in which North Carolina was “out of substantial compliance,” include the following:
Safety Outcomes
1. Children are, first and foremost, protected from abuse and neglect.
2. Children are safely maintained in their homes whenever possible and appropriate.
Permanency Outcomes
1. Children have permanency and stability in their living situations.
2. The continuity of family relationships and connections is preserved for children.
Child and Family Well-Being Outcomes
1. Families have enhanced capacity to provide for their children’s needs.
2. Children receive appropriate services to meet their educational needs.
3. Children receive adequate services to meet their physical and mental health needs.TPD76DPT
In other words, federal evaluators found that, despite implementation of ASFA’s mandated priority of “safety first,” North Carolina was not doing a sufficient job of keeping children safe, nor was North Carolina doing a sufficient job of maintaining children safely in their own homes whenever possible and appropriate. Additionally, children do not have permanency or stability in their living situations, or continuity with their family relationships and connections.
Another sign of North Carolina’s functioning in the environment created by ASFA is that in 2001, North Carolina earned $623, 679 in adoption bonus money for increasing the number of children adopted.TPD77DPT In 2003, North Carolina’s adoption bonus dwindled to $320,000.TPD78DPT In 2005, North Carolina did not earn any adoption bonus money at all.TPD79DPT
In raw numbers, in 2000, the year during which ASFA was implemented, 1,337 children were adopted in North Carolina. In 2001, the number was 1,327 (10 fewer). In 2002, the number was 1,324, another slight decrease from the previous year.TPD80DPT As for children still awaiting adoption, the numbers have declined, but not radically so. In 1999, before ASFA was implemented, there were 3,595 children waiting to be adopted; in 2000, the number increased to 3,709; in 2001, it decreased to 3,329; and in 2002, 3,130 children still waiting to be adopted.TPD81DPT

Conclusion:

The problems which ASFA was designed to solve will not be solved unless and until the root cause of the child welfare problem is addressed: poverty. There is simply no excuse for 20% of NC children to be living in poverty in 21PstP Century America. This author does not advocate that we return to a welfare system which involves no responsibility, and hand-outs of government checks. But at the same time, parents living in poverty should be given reasonable amounts of assistance for reasonable amounts of time, and they should be given a legitimate chance to address the issues which create barriers to them living safely with their children.
This is important, not just because parents have Constitutionally protected rights, but also because children should have the right and opportunity to know their parents and siblings and other relatives. In poverty-driven neglect cases, the government should be required to make genuine reasonable efforts. Further, what the government orders, the government should pay for; for example, if a trial court orders a parent to have psychological evaluation as a condition of reunification, and the parent is indigent, the government should pay for the evaluation. Indigent parents should not have their rights terminated if they fail to finish a case plan because they are unable to afford what the government orders them to do
In cases where there is clear evidence of intentional abuse, termination should be should be fast-tracked. If a parent has a subsequent child, after his/her rights are terminated to an abused child, s/he should bear the burden of proof that s/he is fit to parent that subsequent child.
“Permanent termination of parental rights has been described as the family law equivalent of the death penalty in a criminal case.”TPD82DPT
This Court’s decisions have by now made plain beyond the need for multiple citation that a parent’s desire for and right to “the companionship, care, custody, and management of his or her children” is an important interest that “undeniably warrants deference and, absent a powerful countervailing interest, protection.TPD83DPT
It is a fallacy to apply either/or thinking to child welfare cases: children should be both safe AND protected from unnecessary severance from their families of origin whenever preservation or reunification is reasonably possible. That is the place in the middle where the pendulum should ultimately settle, and where the law would make sense.

TP1PT DEBRA BAKER,MAKING SENSE OF THE ASFA REGULATIONS 3 (2001). See, also, Pub. L. 103-89.
T2T Id. ASFA was codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 620-679.
PPT3T Id., at 4.
PPTP4PT See, generally, Baker, supra at note 1.
TP5 PTSee, generally, RICHARD GELLES, THE BOOK OF DAVID: HOW PRESERVING FAMILIES CAN COST
CHILDREN’S LIVES (1996).T
P6 PSee, generally, MARIANNE BERRY, THE FAMILY AT RISK: ISSUES AND TRENDS IN FAMILY
PRESERVATION SERVICES (1997).
P7 PSee, e.g., UTroxel v. GranvilleU, 530 U.S. 57 (2000)(holding that the Due Process Clause “includes
a substantive component that provides ‘heightened protection against government
interference with certain fundamental rights and liberty interests.’ The liberty interest at issue in this case – the interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children – is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interest recognized by this court.”) UTroxelU, at 65 (citation omitted).
P8 PSee, e.g., UIn re R.T.W.U, 359 N.C. 539, 614 S.E.2d 489 (2005)(holding that it is possible for parents
to forfeit their constitutionally protected rights if they are found to be unfit, or if they behave
in a manner which is inconsistent with their constitutionally protected status,) UR.T.WU. at 543, 614 S.E.2d at 492.
P9 PRICHARD WEXLER,WOUNDED INNOCENTS: THE REAL VICTIMS OF THE WAR AGAINST CHILD
ABUSE 30-31(1995).
P10 PId., at n. 2-3.
P11 PThe Adoption History Project: Charles Loring Brace (1826-1890), http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~
adoption/people/brace.html (last visited 26 November 2005).
P12 PSeeWEXLER, supra note 4, at 35.
P13 PId., at 36.
P14 PLYNNELL HANCOCK, HANDS TO WORK 78 (2002).
P15 DUNCAN LINDSEY, THE WELFARE OF CHILDREN 13 (2004)
PP16 PJENNIFER REICH, FIXING FAMILIES: PARENTS, POWER, AND THE CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM 34
(2005).
P17 PId.
P18 PId., at 35.
P19 PJOHN HUBNER, SOMEBODY ELSE’S CHILDREN: THE COURTS, THE KIDS, AND THE STRUGGLE TO
SAVE AMERICA’S TROUBLED FAMILIES 71 (2003).
P20P Id., at 71.
P21 PId., at 72.
P22 PId.
P23 PSee REICH, supra note 16, at 43.
P24 Id., at 42.
PP25 PId., at 42-3.
P26 PId.
P27 PSee LINDSEY, supra note 15 at 83, noting that there were more than 500,000 children in foster care
in 1977, and only 262,000 in 1982.
P28 PId.
P29 PSeeWEXLER, supra note 9, at 219.
P30 PId.

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