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

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Leechburg couple sues over removal of children

Leechburg couple sues over removal of children

Richard Gazarik is a Tribune-Review staff writer and can be reached at 724-830-6292 or via e-mail.

By Richard Gazarik
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Saturday, July 17, 2010

A former Vandergrift couple claims the Westmoreland County Children's Bureau violated their civil rights last year when the agency forcibly removed their four children without legal cause.

Carrie and Jeremy Richard, who live in Leechburg, filed suit Friday in federal court in Pittsburgh against the agency, caseworkers Nicole Williams and Melissa Melville and Vandergrift Borough.

Attorney Alexander Lindsay charged that the caseworkers removed the children from the Richards' home in July 2009 and then filed a criminal charge against Carrie Richard to justify the removal.

The suit charges the defendants with negligence, civil conspiracy, malicious prosecution and inflicting emotional distress.

The suit contends that the bureau held the children in protective custody for 24 hours without a court order and failed to schedule a formal hearing within the required 72 hours.

Lindsay maintains the bureau failed to keep the report confidential as required by law and did not place the children in an "appropriate" foster home.

Williams and Melville went to the Richards' home to investigate a report that Carrie Richard had given a pill prescribed for her son to her daughter, according to the lawsuit. The next day, the caseworkers returned with a police officer and took custody of the children. On July 23, police filed a felony child endangerment charge against the Richards.

"These charges were filed without probable cause and without any reasonable basis and filed solely to support the illegal seizures of the children in question ... ," Lindsay wrote.

The district attorney's office eventually dismissed the charge.

Lindsay said the investigation should have concluded when the caseworkers learned the charge was unfounded.

In August, the former husband of Carrie Richard was awarded custody of three children; her mother was granted custody of the fourth.

County attorney Mark Geselman declined to comment.

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/westmoreland/s_690771.html

International class action Filed Please join-U.S IS Included!

International class action Filed Please join. Johnshow details 7:38 AM (4 hours ago)Ian Evans July 16 at 3:25pmDear All,
The Class Action has been filed in Courts now including the International Court of Justice, International Criminal Court and the Supreme Court.
Now we need YOU to help us!! We are looking for more names to be added to the list (that is already into the hundreds) and for you to spread the word, outside facebook!!
Anyone can inbox either myself or James Moore to be included in this action, or email us via the website! Even if you just need to know what this action is all about, just ask us!
http://www.freedom-advocacy-law.co.uk/
We are doing everything to make this biggest fight for children and parents ever, but we need you to help! Its you who have the strongest fight for your children, so make it something they cannot ignore and join the Class Action.

Sam Hallimond. The U.S. IS included!

Freedom Advocacy & Law - Home
www.freedom-advocacy-law.co.uk

Friday, July 16, 2010

Universality of Grief Experienced by Mother's Who Lose Children to Adoption

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=gmail&attid=0.1&thid=129dddf26c94dbf8&mt=application/pdf&url=https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui%3D2%26ik%3D47167b6cfa%26view%3Datt%26th%3D129dddf26c94dbf8%26attid%3D0.1%26disp%3Dattd%26zw&sig=AHIEtbQv9st4ad8Jva0TUgvO0x8B4Spbhw

Foster care fraught with private abuses, public excuses

Foster care fraught with private abuses, public excuses

AJC investigation: Children needing homes get placed in harm’s way with few repercussions


By Alan Judd
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia officials decided last year that a rules violation by a private foster care agency was so egregious it warranted one of the toughest possible penalties.

The agency, state records show, had inappropriately placed two children in the same foster home. One was a 17-year-old who had engaged in incest and other sexual activity. The other was 8, autistic and mute, with a history of being abused and an IQ of 16. The boys at first shared a bedroom; ultimately, they shared a bed.

The foster agency’s punishment: a $300 fine.

What happened at the Trek Program, a foster agency based in Fort Oglethorpe, and how the state responded illustrate the scope of problems in Georgia’s growing system of publicly funded but privately operated foster care, according to an investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The newspaper reviewed more than 1,500 reports of state inspections and investigations, which provide an astonishing narrative of stark conditions and inadequate oversight in small foster homes and large group facilities alike.

Fights. Sexual assaults. Consensual sex between young teens. Abuse by foster parents and group home employees. Escapes. Suicide attempts. All occur with regularity at many of Georgia’s 336 private foster care agencies, the Journal-Constitution’s examination found.

One agency, for example, repeatedly used anti-psychotic drugs to subdue misbehaving children. Another tried to rid residents of “demons” through forced exorcism.

Yet the state office that oversees foster care consistently excuses serious, repeated rules violations that jeopardize children’s health and safety.

Since 2008, officials have issued 1,107 citations to 300 of the 336 private agencies. Most cases involved multiple violations of foster care rules. But the state imposed fines or other penalties — what it calls “adverse actions” — in just 83, or 7 percent, of those citations. The median fine: $500.

Of the 336 private foster care agencies, 100 receive direct state funding; last year’s total exceeded $55 million. Even among those agencies, violations are common. In the past two years, the state has cited 91 of the 100 agencies — while continuing to pay them for housing foster children.

Like many other states, Georgia increasingly relies on private agencies — not-for-profit organizations, for the most part — to place children in foster homes or group homes and to oversee much of their care. Many of the children have been diagnosed with mental illnesses, behavioral disorders, or both. Some enter foster care through the state’s social services system to protect them from abusive or neglectful parents. Others come through juvenile courts after getting in trouble with the law.

About 4,000 children, roughly half those in state care, reside in privately owned facilities. A decade ago, private agencies cared for no more than 10 percent of Georgia’s foster children.

State oversight, however, has not kept pace with the growth in private care.

In Fulton and DeKalb counties, Georgia’s most populous, half the children in foster care did not receive the required two visits a month from state workers in 2009, court-appointed monitors said in a recent report. In addition, the monitors said, state officials inspected the operations of one-third as many private foster agencies last year as in 2008.

And while half the foster children in the two counties live in private facilities, the monitors told a judge, they account for three-fourths of substantiated maltreatment cases in foster homes. (The state recently countered that 37 percent of the maltreatment occurred outside foster homes.)

“These are just the cases that actually get identified, investigated and substantiated as abuse,” said Ira Lustbader, associate director of Children’s Rights Inc., a New York-based advocacy group involved in the federal lawsuit that led to the monitors’ appointment.

“If the state is going to utilize the private sector, they have to have mechanisms in place” to ensure children’s safety, Lustbader said. “In the end, it’s all about the quality of the state’s oversight.”

State officials, however, say regulating foster care agencies is a complicated undertaking, one that involves using both persuasion and the specter of serious penalties to combat substandard treatment.

“It is not the goal to put people out of business,” said Keith Bostick, director of the state Office of Residential Child Care. “We want to do as much as we can to try to keep kids safe. But it is a balancing act.”

Dena Smith, spokeswoman for the Department of Human Services, which oversees the regulatory office, added: “Many times there are agencies or providers that, with a soft nudge, they can get back into compliance.”

But many foster care providers complain that enforcement is too aggressive, too focused on administrative requirements that don’t directly affect how children are treated.

“The regulations are good regulations,” said Normer Adams, executive director of the Georgia Association of Homes and Services for Children, an industry lobbying group. “But sometimes the citations are really tedious. Most of the violations don’t threaten the health or safety of a child.”

Regardless, in most instances, the state merely tells private agencies to correct deficiencies. Sometimes it also threatens an “adverse action.” But many agencies continue to violate the rules, with little or no consequence.


Drugs and demons

One day last April, an employee of the Mercy’s Door group home near Dalton approached a resident with a plan for his redemption: exorcism.

The employee took the boy to an office, where four other staff members were waiting, the boy later told a state inspector. They sat the boy in a chair and encircled him, hands joined, saying they would “exorcise the demons out” of him, he told the inspector.

“In Jesus’ name,” the boy quoted a staff member as saying, “remove the demons.”

Employees at Mercy’s Door required residents to attend daily “devotionals,” where they claimed to “rebuke demons of depression” and spoke in tongues, according to a second boy, who witnessed part of the exorcism rite. When another resident, an atheist, left his room, the boy said, staff members prayed over his bed. The staff, according to one resident, believed that “everyone has demons inside of them.”

The boy targeted by the exorcism said two staff members rubbed olive oil on his forehead and spoke about “four angels and rings of fire” — an apparent reference to Revelation’s prophesy that 144,000 people will be “sealed” and spared in Earth’s inevitable destruction. The boy said he was told he had been “bought for a price and adopted by Jesus.”

At one point, two of the facility’s employees later said, the boy became distraught. “Why,” he asked, jumping out of his chair, “can’t you be Baptist?”

In a brief telephone interview, the facility’s director, Veronica Alcerro, declined to comment.

A state investigation confirmed the boy’s story about the exorcism — and found that an employee of the group home, which received $62,416 in state money last year, had lied to an inspector.

But while the state cited Mercy’s Door for rules violations, it assessed no penalty.

In May 2008, the state cited Morningstar Treatment Services, which operates the Youth Estate group home outside Brunswick, for repeatedly using anti-psychotic drugs to control residents who would “act up.” A similar citation had been issued the previous October.

Regulators described the shots as an improper form of chemical restraint, used “as a means of convenience” for the facility’s staff.

One resident, for instance, was drugged for “non-compliance,” according to an incident report prepared by Morningstar. The resident had argued over serving an in-school suspension, so a nurse gave the child Ativan, an anti-psychotic, and Benadryl, an over-the-counter antihistamine also used as a sedative. After “lying on the bench for a little while,” the incident report said, the child completed the suspension “without fighting it.”

The state ordered Morningstar to revise its medication policy, and the agency said it would.

Ten months later, however, state inspectors learned that Morningstar was still using medication to discipline or control residents.

A nurse sedated one child for “being out of area.” Another resident was given a blend of Benadryl, Ativan and Haldol, another anti-psychotic, for “agitation, destruction and self-abuse.” Yet another received Valium for “agitation and aggression”; when the child still didn’t calm down, a nurse gave him the powerful anti-psychotic drug Thorazine.

In those instances, as in others, inspectors noted, “there was no valid prescription for the medications given.”

Staff members told inspectors that without the shots, “they would not be able to handle some of the residents,” according to a state report.

The four dozen or so residents at Morningstar typically have IQs between 40 and 70 and emotional and behavioral disorders, said Barry Kerr, the agency’s chief executive.

Morningstar has been “very aggressive” in reducing the use of drugs to manage residents’ behavior, Kerr said. The medicines, he said, have been used only “when we did not have another alternative.”

After Morningstar’s second citation, the state gave the agency a stern warning: “Based on repeat rule violations and failure to comply with an accepted plan of correction, adverse action may be initiated.”

About a week later, the state did act against Morningstar.

It imposed a $450 fine.

‘Eyes on the situation’

At least once a year, Rachel Neal shows up unannounced at each of the 80 or so foster care facilities that comprise her portfolio as a state inspector.

She carries a lengthy list of rules that each must follow: a minimum number of training hours for employees, up-to-date inspections for vehicles that transport foster children, and on and on.

Most violations get a written citation and are corrected within weeks. But when she discovers dangerous situations, such as toxic materials left within the reach of children, Neal expects instant remedies.

“Usually, they’ll be like, ‘OK, Ms. Neal, that will be dealt with immediately,’ ” she said during a tour of The Bridge, a group home in northwest Atlanta. “We make sure before I leave that that hazard will be fixed.”

Even during standard inspections, Neal said, “a lot of times you may come across something else” that endangers children or otherwise violates state rules. She said she may deviate from the routine “if I hear something, or see something, or read something in a file.”

But Neal and other inspectors spend relatively little time at each foster care facility. State case workers — assigned to a different division of the Department of Human Services — are supposed to visit each child they oversee twice a month. But they may not always look for problems affecting children supervised by other case workers, said Melissa Carter, the state’s child advocate.

“They are our eyes on the situation,” Carter said. “If I’m a case manager and I’m responsible for little Susie, I just go in and take a look at little Susie. It could be that other children were seen and other problems could have been detected.”

‘Minimal information’

In early 2007, the state took custody of an autistic child who had been neglected and abused in his home. The boy was “greatly at risk” of more maltreatment, case workers wrote, and would have to be “safeguarded from abuse.”

The state then delegated the boy’s protection to a private agency: Trek, a nonprofit program operated by the Lookout Mountain Community Services Board in North Georgia. Trek, in turn, placed the child in a foster home with which it contracted.

In March 2009, the state asked Trek to handle another child with profound troubles: a 17-year-old with a long, repulsive sexual history. The agency chose the same home where it had put the autistic child.

No one, however, told the foster parents about the 17-year-old’s experiences with incest and pornography. Or about his “sexual inappropriateness” with a stepparent. Or about what a therapist described as his “distorted sexual beliefs”: that children aren’t hurt if adults molest them, for example, and it’s OK for an older child to initiate sex with a younger one.

Trek provided “very minimal information,” the foster parents would later tell a state inspector. When they asked to see the 17-year-old’s psychological evaluations, the foster parents said, a Trek case worker demurred, saying only that the child had “never sexually acted out in previous placements.”

The foster parents moved the 17-year-old into a bedroom with the 8-year-old autistic boy. About a month later, the night of April 7, a cry transmitted by a baby monitor awoke one of the foster parents. He went to the boys’ bedroom, where he found the 17-year-old in bed with the younger child. The older boy was masturbating and had one hand in the 8-year-old’s pants.

The state cited Trek for failing to “prepare the foster family for the placement ... by anticipating adjustments and problems that may arise.” The previous month, the agency had received two similar citations. And a month later, the state assessed the $300 fine.

John Brewer, Trek’s program director, declined to comment on the case. But he said Trek tries to comply with state rules.

“They’ve always looked for specific things and make sure we follow through,” Brewer said. “We do get cited occasionally, and we try to correct those things.”


No one told

The state has cited numerous agencies that withheld critical information from foster parents.

For instance, state officials found that Benchmark Family Services of Jonesboro knew a child it placed in a foster home was supposed to receive therapy for sexual misbehavior. But no one, records show, told the foster family.

Soon, the child “inappropriately touched” another student at school, according to state reports. At the foster home, he groped another child.

The state cited the agency, but imposed no penalty.

A child placed in 2008 by another agency, Choices for Life of Georgia, based in Valdosta, had entered foster care after having sex with a cousin. He was not supposed to sleep, bathe, undress or be alone with younger children.

Again, no one told the foster family. Within weeks, the boy had molested at least one of the younger children in the home.

The state cited the agency, but imposed no penalty.

Foster parents need information about children in their care, said Beth Locker, policy director for Voices for Georgia’s Children, an Atlanta-based advocacy group.

“When that doesn’t happen,” Locker said, “it’s hard to know whether it’s a breakdown in communication, or a genuine concern about the privacy of a child’s family, or a concern about the cost of providing needed services.”

Sometimes, however, foster parents exacerbate harm already done to the children they supervise.

Choices for Life is one of several agencies cited for not preventing foster parents from using corporal punishment or other prohibited disciplinary methods. Last year, regulators said, the agency “failed to take appropriate corrective action” after learning a child had been spanked, and injured, by her foster parent. The child reported the spanking in December 2008, but Choices for Life left her in the foster home for 42 days.

The state imposed no penalty. It rarely does unless it finds a series of serious violations.

Inspectors documented numerous deficiencies in oversight by Bethany Christian Services of Atlanta, for instance. One of the agency’s foster parents left a child who uses a wheelchair home alone several times. Once, a social worker came by and found the wheelchair upstairs and the child on the basement floor, unable to get up and lying in his own waste.

Two other foster parents with Bethany forced a child to swallow a Benadryl tablet. The foster parents, the child said, called it a “sleep vitamin.”

From 20 investigations and four other inspections since May 2008, the state has cited Bethany Christian eight times for a total of 27 rules violations.

Just once, however, did the state impose a penalty: a $500 fine this January.

----------------------

Differing solutions

More regulation or less? Experts and children’s advocates are divided in their suggestions for improving Georgia’s foster care system.

Those who support tougher enforcement of foster care rules suggest that:

● More state case workers are needed so each child in foster care can be visited at least twice each month, as required by a settlement agreement in a lawsuit over conditions in foster care.

● The state should be more diligent in searching for relatives to care for children taken into protective custody.

● State officials could more closely monitor private agencies that operate group homes or place children in foster homes; inspections of those agencies dropped dramatically in 2009.

● The state could increase funding to replace case workers and other regulators, whose numbers have declined through attrition, retirement and other factors.

Those who say less-stringent oversight would help privately operated foster care agencies propose that:

● The state could eliminate what one report called “disparities in degrees of regulation and disparate treatment” of state-supervised foster homes and those overseen by private agencies. Problems in state-operated homes, the report said, may be addressed by case workers “who personally know and have worked with the foster parents.”

● Privately operated foster homes could be regulated by social workers, rather than inspectors with more of an enforcement mentality.

● A single, independent body — not affiliated with the Department of Human Services, which funds foster care — could oversee all foster care providers.

Sources: Court-appointed monitors’ report to U.S. District Court, Georgia Office of the Child Advocate’s 2008 annual report, AJC research

How we got the story

For this series of articles exploring Georgia’s increasing reliance on private agencies to operate the state’s child welfare system, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution examined more than 1,500 state reports and other public documents and interviewed foster care providers, state officials and children’s advocates.

Today: Substandard conditions in privately operated foster care settings seldom incur penalties.

Monday: A riot at a North Georgia group home for foster children was the culmination of a long slide into chaos — and of the state’s failure to intervene.

Next Sunday: Breakdowns in multistate adoptions arranged by a private agency from Georgia largely escape the attention of state regulators.

April 26: Private adoption and foster care agencies are supposed to be not-for-profit organizations. That doesn’t stop some agency officials from turning child welfare into a lucrative enterprise.

http://www.ajc.com/news/foster-care-fraught-with-469486.html

The Future of DCYF-The Role of the Federal Government


The Role of the Federal Government
Several highly-placed DCF sources have told me that they are aware that DCF often frightens citizens unnecessarily, and does not do a very good job in child welfare. However, DCF maintains, at least privately, that it has no choice. It will point to various federal child welfare acts, starting with social security in the 30’s, which put a premium on removing kids and placing them in foster care, or putting them up for adoption.

And, of course, this almost always mean “poor kids.” The well-off can hire better lawyers and usually work around it.

The history of federal laws which encourage child removal is a perfect example of why the Founding Fathers intended a limited central government. It is a perfect example of why disregarding the Constitution has led to problems.

I gladly acknowledge the research in the fine article “A Brief Legislative History of the Child Welfare System”, by Murray and Gesiriech, in preparing this section. However, any errors in this section are my own.

THE OLD DAYS

In ancient Rome, parents had life-and-death power over their children. Children were property, and it was no one else’s business what parents did with them.

Things gradually improved. One result of books like Oliver Twist was to create public awareness of the plight of children. And yet measures to reduce child labor and other forms of child abuse were once regarded as wildly radical.

In the 18th Century, the practice developed of hiring out orphans and other children in poverty to work for families. Some of these families were kind; others were abusive. The famous poem “Little Orphant Annie”, by James Whitcomb Riley, romanticizes the life of indentured orphans. Even today, it has inspired a comic strip and a notable Broadway musical.

By the 19th Century, this practice largely gave way to orphanages, run by charitable and religious organizations. While out of favor today, it must be remembered that orphanages were intended as a kindly benefit for innocent children. However, progressive persons realized that orphanages, at best, were not pleasant places to grow up. The idea of foster care began to develop in the mid-19th Century.

Of course, there were few if any controls on foster care or other child welfare matters.

THE SPCA TO THE RESCUE

There were social workers in America in the early 20th Century, although they were not quite what they are today. In New York City, a social worker discovered an unbalanced woman in the slums who was abusing her daughter horribly, even by the standards of the day. She was beating the kid regularly and stabbing her with scissors. The social worker was appalled, but could do nothing, as the woman had broken no laws. The child was her property.

The social worker was creative. Earlier activists had passed laws against animal cruelty, resulting in the development of the SPCA. The worker used animal cruelty laws to rescue the child, and to push for laws against cruelty to children.

The federal government also got involved, but its role was very small at the time.

States began to recognize that kids in criminal trouble should be treated more kindly than were adult criminals. The first Juvenile Court began in Illinois in 1899. Connecticut began juvenile court in 1921. These were juvenile delinquency courts, intended to help and reform kids. Juvenile jails were thus known as “reform schools.” Court proceedings were private, and the kids were not publicly identified.

THE NEW DEAL

The most famous legislation of the New Deal is, of course, the Social Security Act. The Act was intended to protect the small number of Americans who lived too long to work, in the days of no pensions and little savings. Of course, social security expanded to include disability insurance, and later Medicare and Medicaid. It is hard to believe that Americans once lived without social security laws.

A little-known provision of social security, in 1935, offered federal grants to states for child welfare services. As might be imagined, these grants caused the states to increase their own child welfare programs. Still, child welfare was considered a State-based matter.

In 1937, a group of judges dedicated to improving the juvenile delinquency courts, and the plight of children in trouble or from broken families, formed the NCJFCJ – National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges.

THE KENNEDY YEARS

Federal child welfare expanded in the 1960’s. Assistance was provided to needy families with dependent children. However, there was a problem. Many needy children were born out of wedlock, and their homes were deemed unsuitable by the mores of the day. In one famous incident, the State of Louisiana expelled 23,000 children from the welfare roles, simply because they had been born illegitimate. People quickly realized that illegitimacy was not the child’s fault, but what could be done if the kids were in unsuitable homes? Orphanages were out of style.

The answer was to push the little-used concept of foster care. The government developed two ideas which are accepted today: try to provide appropriate services to parents, to make their homes suitable; and move the kids to suitable placements in the interim.

However, as with all federal programs, no one knew where to stop. The feds conditioned grants to states with the requirement that states aggressively report to the courts all kids who were candidates for removal. As might be expected, the states went where the money was, and more and more children were removed from their homes.

With the increasing strength of public employee unions, social workers saw it as their duty to remove kids whenever possible. Reunification was a remote possibility. And the parents, who were overwhelmingly poor, had little or no legal assistance.

THE GREAT SOCIETY

In 1967, Congress made foster care mandatory for all states. In 1969, Connecticut created the Department of Children and Youth Services (DCYS), from an amalgam of existing agencies. In 1993, the name was changed to Department of Children and Families, or DCF. Even today, many people still refer to it as “DCYS”.

DCF’s mission included identifying abused and neglected children. But these kids were not juvenile delinquents, and the parents were not necessarily in adult criminal court or in family court. Since we already had Juvenile Courts for delinquents, it seemed natural to expand these courts to cover DCF abuse and neglect cases. And thus the idea was born that DCF abuse and neglect cases are conducted in secret, in the Juvenile Courts.

In 1968, the NCJFCJ moved its headquarters to the University of Nevada, in Reno. Of course, NCJFCJ quickly expanded to include child abuse/neglect cases as well as delinquency cases.

Social workers were reasonably quick to see that NCJFCJ, with its prestigious-sounding title of an organization of judges, would be a perfect lobbying organization for the social work industry. To this day, NCJFCJ conducts work in both delinquency and child protection. Nominally a judge-based organization, NCJFCJ benefits from a great deal of work from the social worker industry, including journal articles, books, seminars, conferences, and the like.

As of December, 2009, there were 12 NCJFCJ members in Connecticut. This firm is the only one of the 12 that represents private-paying adults in DCF matters.

In 1974, Congress expanded its role in providing federal funding to combat child abuse and neglect. In exchange, states were required to establish child abuse reporting systems, and to implement mandatory reporting laws. While those are in general good thing, it became obvious that the existence of the social worker industry depended on federal money; which meant that establishing good statistics was more important than success in individual cases. A major bureaucracy was well underway.

As always, the federal government ebbs and flows. Congress got wind of the fact that too many kids were being removed, and that not enough services were being given to natural parents. Therefore, Congress passed legislation in 1980 that was intended to rectify the problem and provide a balance between child protection and family stability. The practical result was the development of what are called “treatment plans.” Again, those are good things, but at least in Connecticut they are largely duplicative of existing state juvenile court efforts. However, being a federal requirement, it must be followed; which is another place that money disappears into.

The rectification lasted about a decade, until Congress decided that not enough kids were being removed. Additional funding was provided for foster care, and state courts were encouraged to test new approaches. As we shall see, that had unintended consequences.

Along the way were various miscellaneous acts. People were concerned that too many Native American (Indian) children were being removed, so special laws were passed to make it harder to remove Indian children from their parents. (This may seem hard to believe in equal-opportunity America, but it is true. It was partially a fallout from Wounded Knee, which also resulted in Indian casino gambling). Then some people were upset that white children might be placed with black families, while others were upset that black children might be placed with white families, and still others were upset that children might not be interracially placed. And Congress, as usual, caught in the political storm, did its best; trying to please everybody, and usually pleasing those with the best lobbies.

In 1980, in order to reward the teachers’ unions for support, President Carter got cabinet status for the Department of Education. This had the effect, of course, of adding layers of education lawyers, and turning education administrators into paper-pushers. It had the unintended effect, along with mandated reporter laws, of making the schools into DCF partners for the purpose of getting child abuse/neglect referrals.

For every good school referral, my experience suggests that there are at least a dozen unnecessary ones. The effect is to keep DCF busy.

THE DAWN OF A NEW CENTURY

The ebb and flow started to stabilize as the 21st Century approached. Congress passed the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, known as ASFA.

As one court put it, “ASFA sets strict time limits for states to make certain children achieve permanency to prevent them from lingering in foster care.” This is a laudable goal, but what it actually means is that finally, what everybody had suspected has become established law: foster placements and adoptions are officially encouraged.

The NCJFCJ, in its own training manuals for judges, stated that the indirect impact of ASFA on the courts would be more TPR cases, more adoptions, more guardianships, and more hearings on those cases. The NCJFCJ manual also talks about the need for judicial oversight of the child protection system. Nowhere, not in a single place, does it mention the need to curb DCF excesses. When I attempted to become part of the NCJFCJ Advisory Group on Abuse/Neglect matters, I was given a very polite “Thank you; we’ll call you” response.

Needless to say, I was never called.

Foster and pre-adoptive parents were given more rights to be heard. OTC’s were encouraged. TPR procedures were made virtually mandatory if a child were in foster care for 15 months (but with no enforceable requirement that social workers tell this to the parents). Adoption across state lines was facilitated. Health insurance coverage was facilitated.

Another thing that parents and lawyers were not told is that ASFA provides additional Federal grants to States, based upon the State’s adoption rate. Naturally, the formula is complicated and subject to change.

In the 1997 ASFA, if the number of adoptions in a fiscal year exceeded the “base number” (an average of the number of foster children adopted in previous years), then the State got $4,000.00 per adoption. For some inexplicable reason, special-needs-child adoptions got only $2,000.00 per adoption over the base number.

The formula was made more generous in a 2003 revision. The $4,000.00 regular figure remained, but special-needs-child adoptions over the base number increased to $6,000.00 per adoption. For older children (age 9 and above), who traditionally are harder to place, the figure was a whopping $8,000.00 per child over the base number (Eight thousand; it is not a typo).

In an amendment signed into law on October 7, 2008, states may receive an additional $1,000.00 per adoption, if the state’s adoption rate exceeds its highest recorded foster child adoption rate since 2002. The $4,000.00 and $8,000.00 over-base-number figures remained unchanged.

It is true that in fiscal year 2007, Connecticut DCF received none of this additional money, as it did not exceed its own base numbers. But obviously, the incentive is present to exceed the base number. As any DCF defense lawyer will attest, DCF is thinking foster placement and adoption whenever possible.

One good thing about facts is that you are free to interpret them in any way that you like. The obvious social worker response is that the money helps to get kids adopted. Nowhere is there any consideration, or any audit, of DCF overreaching, or of whether the adoption was justified in the first place.

It is true that parents subject to TPR get a trial. It is also true that DCF is the party at trial listened to more than other parties; and DCF’s motivation is reasonably clear.

In a TPR trial, DCF has to prevail on a “clear and convincing evidence” standard. That is the same standard as for fraud, or as for transfer of real estate by adverse possession. Our office has attempted to change this standard to “beyond a reasonable doubt”, as is needed for criminal cases. So far, no success, but we will not give up.

THE NEW NEW DEAL

The NCJFCJ has lost no time in lecturing President Obama. In a press release dated November 20, 2008, it noted, among other things:

A commitment by our new President to make [additional funding and new programs] a reality has likely never been more important. Even in the face of substantial social and economic challenges, it is essential to continue and expand support for juvenile and family court improvement efforts. Doing so will help ensure more positive outcomes for all system-involved children, youth, and families….Please take a few minutes to contact President-Elect Obama and members of your own Congressional delegation to let them know it is critical to make these recommendations a priority in the coming four years.

The term “system-involved children” is a code phrase for social worker interventions.

And what exactly are the “positive outcomes” that NCJFCJ wants to push? Do they encompass the 12 items as listed in the earlier article, “Meaningful Child Welfare”?

Hardly. NCJFCJ lists five programs, which I quote verbatim:

1. Support reauthorization of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act;

2. Continue and expand support for prevention programs through the child protective division of the officer of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention;

3. Continue and expand support for judicial and interdisciplinary training, technical assistance, and research;

4. Continue and develop new funding for improving case processing practice in both dependency and delinquency cases through NCJFCJ’s model courts initiatives; and

5. Develop a national program for reforming juvenile delinquency practice at the state level.

To translate:

1. Items 1, 2, and 5 refer to juvenile delinquency.

2. Item 3 says “give us more money for studies and research projects.” No goals are even hinted at. The “research” likely includes more NCJFCJ training manuals, which help judges to help DCF.

3. Item 4 refers to “dependency cases”, which is code for child abuse/neglect cases. “Case processing practice” means “helping DCF to move these cases through court.” Again, not even a hint, not a mention, of the 12 child welfare measures as listed previously, except removal of children; which is DCF’s paid mission. In all fairness, while the vast majority of social workers would agree with the child welfare measures listed, implementation of measures other than child removal would do nothing to help the DCF budget.

No one is quite certain what President Obama will do, what Congress will allow, or what the economy will tolerate. However, we already know that President Obama has selected moderate establishment public figures in the areas of foreign policy, homeland security, and financial reorganization. As several columnists have hinted, he has little experience and no interest in these areas, and wants them stabilized by establishment figures so that he can concentrate on his real interest: economic policy. Or, as some as termed it, the implementation of the new New Deal.

Translated, this means more government spending, in terms of projects and employment; and hope that someone else, or Divine Providence, will fix the deficit. One rather obvious spending need is child welfare. But the social worker industry has already started to co-opt that to mean child removal and social worker benefits; just as the education industry co-opted the idea of solid education into multiple choice tests for the benefit of professional administrators.

Yes, it is all debatable. What is not debatable is that DCF, and its counterpart in other states, will grow.

We can only hope and pray that a Federal Department of Child Protection Services does not rise to Cabinet status, as a payoff to the social worker industry. I have no predictions. It would not surprise me if it happens, regardless of whether I live to see it.

Philosophically, DCF may be seen as a residual institution, in the sense that Jacques Brazun, former Dean of Faculties of Columbia University, dubbed schooling.

Dean Barzun said that the schools were “residual institutions”, in the sense that society expected schools to do whatever it could not do itself. Thus, schools today teach driver education, consumer education, self-esteem, and workplace training. These are all good things for society, but society for one reason or another cannot accomplish them privately; therefore, the schools are nominated.

Similarly, DCF is expected to do all things for children that society cannot do itself. This includes running kiddie prisons, running kiddie hospitals, chastising less-than-perfect parents, and the like. The latest one that I read is for DCF to report instances of animal abuse in families. Again, these are all good things for society, but for one reason or another society cannot get them accomplished; therefore, DCF is nominated.

As may be expected, DCF’s role of child protection will suffer, as its focus is expanded to include nearly everything. Its possible role in the 12 child welfare factors virtually ceases to exist. And a Federal Department of Child Protection Services will only institutionalize this situation.

THE ROLE OF CHILD PROTECTION LAWYERS

As mentioned elsewhere, Connecticut has a Chief Child Protection Attorney (CCPA), who oversees the State-paid lawyers. Those lawyers represent both children and parents in Juvenile Court cases.

The overwhelming emphasis of State-paid lawyer training regards children, not adults. It appears that the State will not reverse the trend of federal action to benefit the social worker industry.

In August of 2008, all Connecticut Juvenile Court state-paid lawyers were sent by the CCPA to a conference in Savannah, GA. A sympathetic friend, at the risk of his livelihood, gave me the instructional CD from that conference.

The instruction was a prodigy of social worker psychotalk. Some examples:

Children’s stories, like those of women, ethnic minorities and other marginalized groups, have been hidden in plain sight between the lines of histories written by and about the powerful.

Viewing children in developmental and ecological context [includes the fact that] Piaget’s observations of children yielded stage theory of child development that captures the child as an evolving organism.

Exosystems (workplace, healthcare, labor markets, fiscal policies, courts, political systems) surround and affect microsystems.

Macrosystem is the surrounding “culture of ideas and power (values, politics, prejudice, etc)” in which we find ourselves.

Human rights are “ozone layer” of Macrosystem.

Childhood is a contested and contingent notion [to be seen through] anthropological lens [and] historical lens.

Yes, I have the printed materials. And no, they were not taken “out of context.” I will observe that after reading the above, I feel that there is no longer any need for parody in our society. Real life is its own parody.

The Savannah instruction goes on to explain that America’s “cultural macrosystem” is bad for children. One reason is that “individual responsibility is the dominant value”. [I am not making this up]. For more traditional statists, we are also told that the “cultural macrosystem” is bad because it “erodes [the] culture of solidarity [due to] classism, sexism, racism, sectarianism.”

Another part of “The Future of [Children’s] Rights” explains that we need a “Children’s Summit gathering”, and quotes from a 2002 UN summit. Guess where that is going.

Obviously, any overgrown flower child has the right to believe what he or she wants to believe. However, why are Connecticut taxpayers subsidizing plane fares, hotel rooms, meals, and incidental expenses, so that state-paid lawyers can get this “education”?

There is even a printed handout on how to get children talking, to get the goods on their parents. Suggested questions:

1. How does your house get clean? Tell me about everyone’s chores.

2. What do you usually have for breakfast?

3. How do you get to school?

4. Tell me about what you do when you get home from school

5. What happened the last time you were sick?

I wonder if President Obama is aware of this particular agenda.

I saw very little to suggest that the 12 child welfare measures listed earlier were being seriously considered.

There was a small part at the Savannah conference actually devoted to representing parents. It consisted of a hopelessly inadequate blurb published by the American Bar Association (ABA). The material was first-grade stuff, and would have embarrassed even my secretary. I wrote to the ABA person and offered my assistance in upgrading the material. No response was received.

The Chief Child Protection Attorney wrote to me on August 5, 2009, politely explaining that the Savannah conference was no problem, since the costs were paid by federal funding. And how do you think the feds got those funds? Again, taxpayer money wasted on the social work industry; to say nothing of lawyers’ time.

It is reasonably clear that the State does not intend to seriously contest DCF abuses with regard to adults, and is going along full-swing with the growing federalization of social work.

NOREIN AGAIN

A previous article had discussed NOREIN – NO REferral INtervention. This is what I consider to be DCF’s ultimate plan; involve itself in every family, even without a referral, to ensure its own survival. To be sure, I have no proof that such a plan consciously exists, but I have no doubt that it is in the minds of DCF thinkers; people who work very hard to ensure that their organization does not have to be accountable.

Parts of one proposed national health care bill would allow “well-trained and competent staff” of the federal government to “provide parents with knowledge of age-appropriate child development in cognitive, language, social, emotional domains…modeling, consulting, and coaching on parenting practices…[and] skills to interact with their child to enhance age-appropriate development.”

The NCJFCJ magazine “Today”, in its Summer 2009 issue, editorially supports something called “The Convention of the Rights of the Child.” This is a U.N. document which, if implemented, would effectively destroy parental rights. It would put the burden of proof on parents to explain, to an unelected and unaccountable bureaucracy, why they are not child abusers or neglectful parents. Yes; right here in America.

Of course, everyone believes that kids have rights. However, who defines those rights: American tradition, practice, and Constitutional law; or U.N. socialists? The article does point out the amusing fact that only the U.S. and Somalia (a nation without an effective government) have failed to ratify this “Convention”. The implication is that we must be inferior to Europe, a point also mentioned in arguments for socialized medicine.

Strangely, I have noticed no mass migration of American parents or kids to the paradises of France and Scandanavia.

That same delightful magazine issue also has an article on “The Lens of Implicit Bias.” You see, you are either a blatant racist, or an unconscious one. And Dr. Shawn C. Marsh, the Director of NCJFCJ’s Juvenile and Family Law Department, is only too happy to point this out to you.

If you believe one NCJFCJ argument, it is easier still to believe another.

A BREATHER

None of this is complicated. The social work industry smells blood. While the federal government has been growing rapidly since the income tax amendment of 1913, socialism has always been officially rejected; but the election of Obama gave the socialists a real chance for a foot in the door.

If you object to the term “socialists” applied to these folks, then here’s an alternative: Those who want to enhance their job security and decrease their accountability see a solid opening, and the consequences to family values be damned.

SUMMARY

The Future of DCF: grow, grow, and grow.

As mentioned several times, most social workers are good to excellent. I have been pleased to write commendation letters on many of them. But people are different in a bureaucracy, and you don’t need to read Kafka to understand that. Dilbert is enough.

I only wish that I could give public credit to the social workers and supervisors who are aware of how abusive their own agency can be, and who have courageously told me so.

The End Result

The end result of the New Deal was this: Government was formally established as the employer of last resort. Never before in American history did anyone even hint that it was Government’s major role to directly employ people. Now it was.

The end result of the Great Society was this: Budget deficits are now an integral part of American fiscal policy. Never before in American history was this accepted, except briefly in wartime. Democrats and Republicans disagreed on specifics, but all agreed that budgets should be balanced. No more.

It may be too early to predict the end result of the New New Deal. However, it is fairly clear that the Regulatory State, to use the words of George Will, has been fully accepted. The New New Deal results in the Corporate State, and presages the End of Individualism as the American way of life.

Waitresses making $12.00 an hour are subsidizing Union auto workers making several times that amount, and millionaire corporate executives making dozens of times that amount; not the other way around. The Corporate State is already here.

Along with the acceptance of Government as the employer of last resort, the acceptance of budget deficits as a way of life, the acceptance of entitlements as a political reality, and the established clout of public employees (including social workers), the end result of the New New Deal for DCF defense law is clear enough: challenging government bureaucracy is a full-time job.

Budget deficits as a way of life can only work if foreigners are willing to buy up our debt. This can happen if the U.S. remains a strong, stable, highly-centralized Corporate State. Individualism will be viewed as a polite fiction.

This is why TV shows such as “House” will remain popular. They allow people an outlet that they cannot achieve in real life. Our entertainment producers are fully in tune with the public mood of despair.

We have not even considered the role of psychologists, and the ever-expanding list of mental problems in DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders). One result is to provide full employment for psychologists, psychiatrists, and associated clinicians and therapists. Another result is to ensure that, for any DCF involvement, a mental problem justifying the involvement may always be found. “Excessive individualistic disorder” is the next step in DSM, and it is coming, in one form or another.

The Joys of Socialism

A few years ago, a bunch of lawyers were gathered in a Juvenile Court hallway during a court break. One of the lawyers was Mack, a very experienced and likable AAG representing DCF.

Mack started telling war stories to pass the time. At one point he said that he had represented DCF in cases all over the State. “What area”, he asked, “do you think had the highest incidence of child abuse?”

Everyone wanted to name one of the big cities, such as Hartford, New Haven, or Bridgeport. However, we were afraid to do so, lest we appeared racist. So we did what lawyers do in those situations – furrowed our brows, frowned, and looked deep in thought.

After about 15 seconds, Mack broke the silence. “I know what you’re thinking. Hartford, New Haven, or Bridgeport. But you’re wrong. The highest incidence of child abuse that I found was in New Britain. That’s because it’s filled with ethnic Eastern Europeans, people who were used to living under Communist rule, or who grew up with adults who did. In Communist countries, people have no outlet. They are pushed around, made to feel unimportant, and can’t do anything about it. So when they come home, they take their feelings out on their families. It’s sort of a way of life.”

Everyone seemed relieved to hear this. And that is a side effect of socialism, one that you don’t often hear in the national debates. People need outlets; and if they are denied them in work life, they will find them elsewhere. The Russian passion for alcoholism is but one aspect of this phenomenon.

Socialism does have some benefits, in that it quickly raises the standard of living of the very lowest members of society. That happened in Russia after the 1917 revolution, and it happened in Cuba after Castro took over. But it does so at a high cost: demoralizing the rest of society, and destroying the will to succeed on your own.

And socialism depends, for its own survival, on the undermining of the family. It encourages children to look to the State for solutions. That is the message of books such as “1984”. It is interesting that Orwell, once a staple of popular culture, has been virtually read out of the curriculum.

It comes to this: individualism works, if we can only embrace morality, and fight the human tendencies of greed and laziness.

Please see Landmarks table.

http://www.agranoff.com/dcffuture_roleoffedgov.htm

CASA SPENDS KIDDIES MONEY ON JUNKETS TO VEGAS

CASA SPENDS KIDDIES MONEY ON JUNKETS TO VEGAS
Bill Medvecky

Well after all children on the Ranch were freed from the clutches of the CPS and CASA dykes, they still spend taxpayors money like it’s going out of style. Even CASA, which is SUPPOSED to be a volunteer organization gets it’s funding from the State, keep in mind the $100,000.00 it received during the initial raid from the State Legislature. Since, then, another $8,000,000.00 has been "Donated", most of it from the State, the rest from the Fed’s. Now unless the State is printing it’s own money, that means the dough is coming out of the taxpayers pockets.

Now it doesn’t bother me in the slightest how much Texan’s have to pay for the Raid, as far as I’m concerned, the more the merrier. However, that’s not really the attitude of those actually paying Taxes in Texas, which eliminates a whole lot of folks in San Angelo and Eldorado where these particular Damsals come from.

I post these pictures for several reasons, and one is to let you boys know where and how your dollars are being spent. Another is to let Rita know why Sam ain’t home most of the time. If you thought, or he told you, he was working, he’s lying to you once again. Yet another is to show you, by their mere presence in the twin towns, the agenda these porkers have all had from the very beginning against the Mormons who are in their midst. This trip had nothing to do with "Research" since there was no case to research. They are merely a pack of bitches on a voyouristic cruise looking at the animals in the zoo. It was no different to them in Eldorado, they were dealing with "Cattle".

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that they are not going to like the fact that I took their pictures but tough shit. Since they didn’t ask the women, children or men on the Ranch to take their pictures; have their children stripped naked and "Examined"; declared their women to all have sexually transmitted diseases; and abuse, neglect and humiliate these people at every single opportunity, I don’t particularly care if you don’t like your fat asses on the net or not.

As for Sam, I remind him that he makes his money off of sniffing in peoples dirty underwear and taking their pictures without permission, so as long as you are in public, expect a lens to be clicking. Look on the bright side, if you were stalking Seth, you’d be looking down the barrel of his .270

http://www.flds.ws/2010/07/16/casa-spends-kiddies-money-on-junkets-to-vegas/

Wash. Man (Child Protection Worker)Facing Child Molestation Charges