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States ALL FAIL MISERABLY. CPS PASSED NOWHERE

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Fern5827 - 12 Sep 2004 15:36 GMT
Subject: States all FAIL MISERABLY. CPS passed nowhere
From: fern5827@aol.com  (Fern5827)
Date: 8/31/2004 8:50 AM Eastern Daylight Time
Message-id: <20040831085034.26941.00000103@mb-m01.aol.com>

Yet welfare workers continue to insist that their interventions are helpful.

Yet, families complain of being ignored, abused, lied to and treated poorly by
every CPS system in the US.

The audits confirm that CPS is abysmal.

Subject: U.S. Finds Fault in All 50 States' Child Welfare Programs
From: wexwimpy wexwimpy@verizon.net
Date: 8/29/2004 10:18 AM Eastern Daylight Time
Message-id: <v9p3j0hhjl62rgg2g72bsn00if3mcj6q9v@4ax.com>

U.S. Finds Fault in All 50 States' Child Welfare Programs
By ROBERT PEAR

Published: April 26, 2004

WASHINGTON, April 25 — Federal investigators have found widespread
problems in child welfare programs intended to protect children from
abuse and neglect, and no state has received passing grades from the
Bush administration in reviews conducted over the last three years.

As a result, states face tens of millions of dollars in penalties.
State officials said the penalties could make it more difficult for
them to pay for the needed improvements.
   
About 900,000 children were victims of abuse or neglect in 2002, and
1,400 of them died, according to the most recent state data, compiled
and reported this month by the Department of Health and Human
Services.

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 have suffered abuse or neglect.

Some states, including New Jersey and Florida, have received national
attention because of scandals in their child welfare programs. But the
federal report suggests that most states have similar problems.

Seven of the 14 federal standards 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.

Federal officials said 16 states did not meet any of the seven
standards. These states were Alaska, California, Georgia, Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Washington, West Virginia and
Wyoming.

Wade F. Horn, the assistant secretary of health and human services
supervising the reviews, said the findings were "a little surprising."

"We set the bar high on purpose," Dr. Horn said. "We want states to
improve. Kids in the child welfare system deserve better than a
minimal standard of care."

Dr. Horn said that no state met one particularly important standard,
which says children should have "permanency and stability in their
living situations." That means, for example, that children should not
bounce in and out of foster care, or from foster home to foster home.

The federal report was based on a review of state data and case files,
as well as interviews with children, their biological parents, foster
and adoptive parents, social workers and juvenile and family court
judges.

Federal officials repeatedly cited states for certain deficiencies:
significant numbers of children suffering abuse or neglect more than
once in a six-month period; caseworkers not visiting children often
enough to assess their needs; and not providing promised medical and
mental health services.

States did somewhat better on the other standards, used to assess
their policies and procedures, the training of caseworkers and the use
of computers to keep track of children.

Many state officials said they generally agreed with the findings.

"Some people say that the federal government is picking on states or
that the standards are not attainable, but we believe it's essential
to shoot for these goals," said Roger A. Munns, a spokesman for the
Iowa Department of Human Services.

Just this month the comptroller of Texas, Carole Keeton Strayhorn,
issued a report on the state's foster care system that was more
negative than the federal review.

"Some of these children are no better off in the care of the state
than they were in the hands of abusive and negligent parents," said
Ms. Strayhorn, a Republican. "Some children have been moved among 30
or 40 temporary homes. Some have been sexually, physically and
emotionally abused while in the system. A few have even died at the
hands of those entrusted with their care."

Msgr. Kevin L. Sullivan, executive director of Catholic Charities for
the Archdiocese of New York, which provides foster care for more than
7,000 children, said, "We are talking about children who have been
burned, beaten and starved."

In 30 percent of the cases reviewed in Oklahoma, federal investigators
said, the child welfare agency did not respond quickly to reports of
abuse and neglect. In Louisiana, the comparable figure was 31 percent,
and in Montana, 37 percent.
\The federal government provides $7 billion a year to states for
foster care, adoption assistance and other child welfare programs. If
states do not correct the deficiencies, they stand to lose some of the
money.

Penalties are estimated at $18.2 million for California, $3.6 million
for Florida, $3.5 million for Texas, $3 million for Pennsylvania, $2.5
million each for Ohio and Michigan, and $2.3 million for New York.
   
Mary J. Nelson, president of the National Association of Public Child
Welfare Administrators, expressed concern about penalties.

"States need to invest more money in foster care and child
protection," Ms. Nelson said. "So the idea of having fewer resources
does not strike me or most states as particularly helpful."

States will be re-evaluated periodically. Federal officials said they
would suspend the penalties if states developed plans of correction
and made substantial progress.

"The goal here is not to impose financial penalties," Dr. Horn said.
"The goal is to improve child welfare."

In Indiana, where at least 51 children died from abuse and neglect
last year, Gov. Joseph E. Kernan, a Democrat, summoned experts at the
Child Welfare League of America, a nonprofit group, to evaluate the
state's program and recommend improvements.

Many states said they did not have enough caseworkers to investigate
reports of abuse or to monitor children in foster care. They have
difficulty recruiting and retaining workers because salaries are often
low. But some states, grappling with what they describe as their worst
fiscal problems in more than 50 years, have cut spending for some
child welfare services.

Representative Benjamin L. Cardin, Democrat of Maryland, has
introduced a bill that would provide $500 million to states to improve
child welfare services in the next five years. Some of the money would
reward states for correcting problems identified by the federal
government.

President Bush has proposed giving states grants to run their foster
care programs in the next five years. States would have broad
discretion in deciding how to use the money.

But Representative George Miller, Democrat of California, said, "It
would be foolhardy to award states a block grant like that at a time
when they cannot meet the specific mandates in current law."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/26/politics/26CHIL.html?ex=1093838400&en=43
76e1b363324895&ei=5070
Kane - 12 Sep 2004 23:05 GMT
 "States ALL FAIL MISERABLY. CPS PASSED NOWHERE"

...........a subject line lie to introduce a thoughtful truthful
account that flies in the face it Its nonsense...........

Fern, your days here as an effective propagandist, and nutcase are
numbered. Outside of the two others that either are all too much like
you, or the one that is your patron because it serves him and his
masters, no one is the least fooled by you. No one believes you, and
that might make them ignore posts such as yours...that needs to be
read.

Some very good folks that might have benefited have left here because
of you.
One that stayed was gracious enough to give you peace to post your
increasingly bizzare and morbid ranting. More will join in that same
kindness, myself included.

I do hope the four of you enjoy talking to each other, because I'm
about done with you...other than simply posting the supporting
information that rebuts refutes you, just as this pasted piece of
yours refutes you.

The pack is reduced to a clever propagandist, a lazy abusive user, a
sloppy minded bigoted whiner, the occasional "nostalgic for the old
days when they controlled this group" batch of socks, and you, an
increasingly lame joke.

Enjoy your retirement, Fern. We have work to do.

Do you crochet?

Kane

>Subject: States all FAIL MISERABLY. CPS passed nowhere
>From: fern5827@aol.com  (Fern5827)
>Date: 8/31/2004 8:50 AM Eastern Daylight Time
>Message-id: <20040831085034.26941.00000103@mb-m01.aol.com>
>
>Yet welfare workers continue to insist that their interventions are helpful.

Yes, they do, and I concur. No one is 100%..least of all you, except
in deceipt and lies.

>Yet, families complain of being ignored, abused, lied to and treated poorly by
>every CPS system in the US.

Yes, innocent families complain righteously, and oddly, so do THE
GUILTY. Ever notice?

>The audits confirm that CPS is abysmal.

I doubt that word was used even by the most biased of examiners. It
was a very limited survey, in data sample...50 cases in districts with
thousands of cases? Misses by just a few percentage point?

Many of the 7 standards graded as passed?

And the preponderance of failures in those tasks less related or not
at all, to child safety..the number one mandate of CPS...tsk.

You said CPS passed nowhere, yet this article says only 16 states
completely failed. Don't you think that a bit ingenuous of you?

And I note, you have, every time you've posted this nonsense, NOT once
posted the source for the actual evaluations...something rather all
too easy to do for you...eh?

Kane

>Subject: U.S. Finds Fault in All 50 States' Child Welfare Programs
>From: wexwimpy wexwimpy@verizon.net
[quoted text clipped - 143 lines]
>http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/26/politics/26CHIL.html?ex=1093838400&en=43
>76e1b363324895&ei=5070
Ancient One - 15 Sep 2004 01:59 GMT
> Subject: States all FAIL MISERABLY. CPS passed nowhere
> From: fern5827@aol.com  (Fern5827)
[quoted text clipped - 155 lines]
> http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/26/politics/26CHIL.html?ex=1093838400&en=43
> 76e1b363324895&ei=5070

It is just as bad in the UK, however instead of dealing with the problem
properly and introduce safeguards, the government is now bringing in several
bills to make any one who complains devoid of any rights to do so.

Last year parents were shorn of rights to sue if they proved they were
falesly alleged against, 2005 will bring in the removal of parents to see
the case made against them.

Complaining against social workers and their work has become a thought
crime, didn't realise it was so bad in the US though.

AO
RPSSUK
Fern5827 - 15 Sep 2004 22:43 GMT
Ancient One from the UK sent in:

>Complaining against social workers and their work has become a thought
>crime, didn't realise it was so bad in the US though.

Ah...so.....George Orwell.  THOUGHT CRIME.

Fitting for the UK.    Welcome!

>Last year parents were shorn of rights to sue if they proved they were
>falesly alleged against

Did not realize that.  Are you referring to the Meadow's debacle?
Join on alt support child-protective-services.   Carried thru
http://www.Google.com   (groups)

>Subject: Re: States ALL FAIL MISERABLY. CPS PASSED NOWHERE
>From: "Ancient One" AncientOne@destroyjaimito.com
[quoted text clipped - 176 lines]
>AO
>RPSSUK
 
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