Title: Texas Department of Family and Protective Services
1Texas Department of Family and Protective Services
- Strategies for Addressing Disproportionality
through Community Engagement Cross-System
Collaboration - Presented by
- Joyce James DFPS Assistant Commissioner for CPS
- Carolyne Rodriguez Director, Texas State
Strategy, - Casey Family Programs
- Mike Griffiths Director of Juvenile Services,
- Dallas County Juvenile Probation
- 11th Annual Disproportionate Minority
Contact Conference - September 9, 2006 New Orleans
2Desired Outcomes for Today
- Understand the community-based approach being
taken in Texas to address Disproportionality - Understand the internal cultural change needed in
systems to address Disproportionality and
disparate outcomes - Learn about the community engagement strategies
for leading this work - Recognize the challenges, barriers and
opportunities in this work - Establish the linkage of this work to DFPS
Renewal in Texas - Consider practical applications by juvenile
justice systems and related disciplines to
address disproportionality
3A Shared Vision . . .
- In May of 2004, Casey Family Programs and
DFPS entered a collaborative relationship,
committed to concentrating resources and energy
to establish an intensive planning and
implementation process to reduce
disproportionality in the Texas child welfare
system. - Texas was chosen in part because of
- its large child population
- its potential for significant program and policy
impact on a statewide level, and - its long-established working relationship with
Casey Family Programs in a systems improvement
collaborative called the Texas State Strategy
4Texas State Strategy System Improvement Efforts
- Development of tools and identification of
evidenced-based practices - Consultation and provision of technical
assistance - Shared facilitation of state-focused, strategic
partnerships - Joint collaboration in addressing systemic racism
in child welfare
5 Texas Department of Family and
Protective Services (DFPS)
- Children First, Protected and Connected!
- The Child Protective Services (CPS) program of
DFPS is designated to receive alleged reports of
child maltreatment and to investigate reports of
suspected abuse and neglect. - The total child population for the state of
Texas is estimated to be 6,277,205. - Goal To ensure child safety and to provide
services that promote the integrity and stability
of the family. -
6CPS Leading Change
- CPS is committed to addressing
disproportionality through its vision of Children
First, Protected and Connected, and ensuring
alignment with CPS values of - respect for culture
- inclusiveness of families, youth and community
- integrity in decision making
- compassion for all
- commitment to reducing disproportionality
- Strategies include
- Implementing legislative changes and mandates
- Adopting promising practices and tools
- Improving use of data
- Increasing the cultural competence of CPS staff
at all levels - Facilitating community-led solutions
7Texas Legislative Mandates
- Senate Bill 6 requires the State to take specific
actions to address disproportionality. - The bill gives statutory authority to the work we
are doing and planning to do - The bill adds to our Texas Family Code, requiring
DFPS to do four things - Provide cultural competency training to all
service delivery staff. Â Â - Increase targeted recruitment for foster and
adoptive parents to meet needs of children
waiting for homes - Target recruitment efforts to ensure diversity
among child welfare staff. - Develop collaborative community partnerships to
provide culturally competent services to children
and families of every race and ethnicity. Â
8Additional Legislative Mandates
- Examination of removal rates and other
enforcement actions - Analysis of disproportionality provided to the
legislature on January 1, 2006 - Development and implementation of remediation
plan reported to the legislature on July 1, 2006
available on agency website
http//www.dfps.state.tx.us/Documents/about/pdf/
2006-07-01_Disproportionality.pdf
9Expected Outcomes
- To reduce, and ultimately to prevent, the
disproportionate representation of and disparate
outcomes for African-American children in the
Texas child welfare and juvenile justice systems,
and to improve services to all children and
families.
10Who is Involved?
- DFPS
- Casey Family Programs
- Youth and family representatives
- Community stakeholders
- African-American children and families
- Local government agencies including law
enforcement - Non-profit agencies
- Community leaders
- Legislative staff
- Foster parents
- University partners
- Faith-based leaders
- Community advocates
- Media
11Guiding Principles from the Beginning..
- To effect social change will require a
multi-faceted approach socially, economically,
educationally and politically - The community must be the driving force behind
any sustainable change -
12Starting with the Data
13Compelling Facts About Disproportionality
- There is great difference between races in the
likelihood that a child will be removed from home
and placed in foster care - Children of color enter the system at
disproportionately high rates as compared to
Anglo children - African American children are 4 times more likely
to be placed in care - African Americans are no more likely to abuse
their children than any other race - Unadjusted data indicate African American
children are overrepresented in the Texas CPS
system and the level of disproportionality
increases at each stage of service
14Texas Data - FY 2005Summary of Statewide Data
15Dallas County Data FY 2005
162005 Texas / Dallas County Juvenile Justice
Referrals Texas Juvenile Probation Commission
17Juvenile Age Population vs. Referrals Texas
Juvenile Probation Commission
18Dallas County Juvenile Department
- Criminal Justice Policy Council
- Stakeholder Report Card Sessions
- Texas State University
- Texas Family Protective Services
- Annie E. Casey Juvenile Detention Alternatives
Initiative Replication Site
19Annie E. Casey FoundationJuvenile Detention
Alternatives Initiative
- Collaboration
- Reliance on Data
- Objective Admissions Screening
- Alternatives to Secure Detention
- Expedited Case Processing
- Strategies for Special Detention Cases
- Strategies to Reduce Racial Disparities
- Rigorous Facility Inspections
20Juvenile Justice Strategies to Impact
Disproportionate Minority Contact
- Examination of System
- Social Context Issues
- Juvenile Justice System Practices
- Collect Data From All Contact Points
- Formulate Vision
- Develop Structure
- Build Alliances
- Diversify Systems Workforce
- Provide Training
- Create Instruments / Guidelines to Minimize
Disparity - Challenge Ancillary Systems to Address Issue
21Project HOPE Successful Model
- Began in May 2002
- Community Vision, Mission and Goals
- Community focused, data-driven
- Existing data maximized and improved
- Gaps identified
- Current status
22Project Hope Center Opening
23Statewide Planning Process
                   Â
Â
Â
Â
Form Community Advisory Committee
Begin implementation
Undoing Racism training   Â
Analyze data to select region Identify community
members and leaders   Â
Hold community planning meeting Â
Analyze data to select
region Identify community members and leaders
- Form Community Advisory Committee
- Review of data
- Charter development
- Other stakeholders
- Plan for decision making
- Identification of resources
- Action planning
- Begin implementation
- Town Hall meetings
- Determine practice models
- MOUs
- Who else should be at the table?
Hold community planning meeting
Undoing Racism training
Â
- Town Hall meetings
- Determine practice models
- MOUs
- Who else should be at the table?
- Â
- Â
- Â
- Â
Â
- Review of data
- Charter development
- Other stakeholders
- Plan for decision making
- Identification of resources
- Action planning
- Â
- Â
- Â
24Requirements
- Leadership commitment
- Diversity and breadth of Disproportionality
Community Advisory Committee - Commitment to stakeholder involvement
- Alignment with Vision and Values
25Statewide Accomplishments
- Through community advocacy, Texas has been
legislatively mandated to address
disproportionality - State Disproportionality Director and Specialists
in place - Target sites selected in several regions to
implement community strategies - Undoing Racism training achieved for all regional
and state office managers and directors, and for
pilot site staff and collaborators - Texas is one of 13 nationwide jurisdictions
participating Casey Disproportionality
Breakthrough Series Collaborative - Best practice training curricula is being
implemented to address cultural competency for
CPS staff - Disproportionality data used to guide community
strategies for systems improvement
26Challenges and Opportunities
- Challenges
- Public sentiment
- Impacting Social Context issues effecting
Disparity issues - Political will / support
- Practice issues
- Elevating the voice
- Supporting child welfare leadership
- Opportunities
- Strong community engagement
- Strong relationships with stakeholders
- Anti-racist principles in all aspects of CPS and
other systems embedded - Constituents engaged in an in-depth way
- Impacting public policy through legislative
engagement - Bar will be raised for all children, youth,
families communities - Chance for a collaborative evaluation with
university partners - Strong impact for sustainable change through
legislative mandates
27Benefits for African-American Youth and Families
- More youth and family engagement
- Fewer youth in the foster care system
- Fewer out-of-home placement moves
- Less time in foster care placement
- More youth placed with kin
- More foster and adoptive homes
- More community commitment, involvement, and
resources
28The Right Thing to Do
- Cowardice asks the question, is it safe?
- Expediency asks the question, is it polite?
- Vanity asks the question, is it popular?
- But conscience asks the question, is it right?
- And there comes a time when one must take a
position that is - neither safe, nor polite, nor popular
- but one must take it because it is right.
- Martin Luther King, Jr.