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DHS – Give Us Back Our Children,
a multi-racial group of mothers and supporters fighting for
custody of their children in foster care, hailed the landmark
decision to criminally indict four workers in the 2006 death of
a child under the supervision of the Philadelphia Department of
Human Services. They will hold a protest at DHS on August 7
to demand an end to DHS abuse of power and lack of
accountability, and cautioned against another DHS “foster care
panic” in response to the tragedy.
“We are sickened that it took the
death of a child to expose the truth, but it is long overdue
that social workers are held accountable for callous, negligent
and deadly behavior that DHS has allowed to go on for years,”
said Pat Albright of the Every Mother is a Working Mother
Network, the group co-coordinating DHS – Give Us Back Our
Children. “Children in real danger like Danieal Kelly are
not protected, while DHS is also quick to recklessly remove
children from caring homes and put them in foster care,
especially children of color, causing life-long scars. Both
are crimes, two sides of the same coin of official
uncaring. Child protection does not equal child removal:
children in care are far more likely to be abused.”
Mary Kalyna, a former child welfare
worker who is part of the group said, “Social workers have a
responsibility to do our jobs, to stand up for our clients and
challenge DHS policies that overlook uncaring, irresponsible
behavior that leads to tragedies like this. If we don’t, what
are we doing? We call on caring social workers to join mothers
to get justice.”
A mother with a current DHS case
added: “While children like Danieal are being starved to death,
beaten and maimed, DHS continues to stay in my life, even after
years of finding no traces of abuse or neglect on my part.
Workers routinely don't show up, or stay five minutes then
submit their time to say they were there two hours and DHS pays
them.”
In the Kelly case, workers falsified
records to show that they had made home visits when they had
not, according to the grand jury report.
Tili Ayala of Justice for Families,
the other coordinating group, began a weekly protest in 2005
outside DHS in her fight to regain custody of her son. “This is
why I am fighting to get my son back, I don’t want him neglected
and deprived of the love he deserves,” she said. Ayala, of
Native American and Latino descent, has never been accused of
endangering or neglecting her son, and has complied with all DHS
requirements but still stands in danger of permanently losing
her parental rights. Her case has been highlighted in local
press.
An African American mother had five
children removed after a neighbor in her predominantly white
neighborhood claimed that she had cockroaches, even though the
man was never in her house. By contrast, Danieal Kelly’s home
was supposedly investigated and deemed acceptable, despite
reports of deplorable conditions by neighbors for two years.
Samara Johnson of WinVisible (Women
with Visible and Invisible Disabilities) said, “This tragic case
reflects how little DHS values both children and mothers,
especially if they are low-income, of color, and in this case,
disabled. They pay millions to agencies to provide services
with very little oversight, a set-up for corruption. In
Danieal’s case, where were the services for this disabled child
and her family? Children are for loving, not for profit.”
Richard Wexler, Executive Director
of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform in
Washington commented: “Mayor Nutter and DHS Commissioner
Ambrose must finish the job of cleaning up the agency, but must
ensure that this time, there is no foster-care panic – no knee
jerk ‘take-the-child-and-run’ response to tragedy.”
Philadelphia removes children from
their homes at a rate three times that of Los Angeles, four
times that of New York and more than six times that of Chicago.
Studies show that children of color are more likely to be taken
from their homes, to stay in protective custody longer and never
to return to their parents. Former foster children have twice
the rate of post-traumatic stress disorder as Gulf War
veterans.
Among the changes the group is
pressing for are:
·
a uniform
standard for determining appropriate action to prevent both
the endangerment of children like Danieal Kelly and the
unjust and unnecessary removal of children from caring parents
·
immediate
implementation of the proposed Alternative Response System to
help families with housing and other resources; poverty does not
equal neglect
·
family/team
decision-making on a broad scale in order to begin to break
through what the Philadelphia Inquirer the “toxic culture” at
DHS, which includes disrespect and harassment of mothers and
slow response to allegations of abuse in foster care
·
a thorough
investigation of the financial relationship between DHS and
provider agencies, including examination of the services clients
are actually receiving, quality control, and the financial
incentives agencies have for keep children in foster care
Pittsburgh and Chicago are among
cities that have implemented changes that resulted in
substantial drops in foster care caseload with child safety
preserved. |