> abc's primetime did a june 1 story on "the crisis of the foster care > system"..............among abc's conclusions were 52 percent of foster [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > child in foster care would keep a child in a good boarding > school............ Although I'm not going to debate statistics or argue about anything (I know for a fact how our system in this part of Canada works, and although I don't know how ABC's info adds up to how we are over here - but I am assuming numbers are not far off) You have to think of what's the lesser evil. The costs are so high. It's tiresome to a point, but in order to just up and dispose of any foster system, you need to no longer have a need for it. Is the money worth it for the statistics to be basically horrible as far as everything goes, or is it better to allow children to be in crisis situations? Every foster home and foster parent or family has guidelines, and they're fairly strict as far as every day life goes for the homes. How would numbers sit if there were no alternatives (such as foster care)? Would abandon rates go up? Would welfare numbers go up? Would there be even more cases of abuse, neglect, would the situations be better or worse if you assume society is the same minus foster care? No, I don't know those answers, but it is something to ponder. A good boarding school may offer a child less harm, a better education, more support, but when the home situation is generally not good, and without foster care to help a percentage, how would the statistics stand for homelessness, prison numbers, welfare rates, etc... If you think of it according to numbers, only 48% don't suffer pts, 70% will wind up with some sort of roof over their head, 75% stay out of jail. Also, I'm not at all agreeing to the comment about children growing up in foster care can become mothers with children in foster care. There *is* a dad for every child as well. Anyways, is there really a better answer, alternative, way to go about the obvious problems that are clear?
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