Title: Texas Department of Family and Protective Services
1Texas Department of Family and Protective Services
- The Impact of Youth Permanence Initiatives on
Reducing Racial Disproportionality and Disparity - Presented by
- Debra Emerson CPS Director of Policy and
Program - Vicky Coffee-Fletcher CPS Division
Administrator for Family Focus - Carolyne Rodriguez Director, Texas State
Strategy, Casey Family Programs -
- 2006 National Convening on Youth Permanence
2Desired Outcomes for Today
- Establish the shared vision of Casey Family
Programs and Texas Child Protective Services
specific to systems improvement to address
disproportionality and outcome disparities - Identify Texas Child Welfare Reform/Renewal
legislative mandates impacting youth permanence - Present Texas data describing the
disproportionality in the Texas child welfare
system for each stage of CPS service - Discuss initiatives and activities targeting
permanence of older children and youth - Explore challenges, opportunities and lessons
learned in addressing the permanency needs of
older youth of color in the child welfare system
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. - The goal of CPS is 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, passed by the 79th Texas
Legislature and signed by Governor Rick Perry,
laid the groundwork for comprehensive reform of
Child Protective Services in Texas. - Resources and direction were put into place to
transform the programs charged with protecting
children from abuse and neglect. - These sweeping reforms have yielded tremendous
improvement in the services that protect the most
vulnerable Texans.
8Texas Legislative Mandates
- Outsourcing Community centered delivery of
substitute care and case management services to
improve services and outcomes for children and
families and achieve timely permanency for
children in out of home care - Child Placement/Kinship Every effort must be
made to identify and locate non-custodial
parents, relatives or other kinship caregiver
willing and suitable to care for child to divert
child from the foster care system - Family Group Decision Making Development and
implementation of family group conferencing as a
strategy to promote family preservation and
permanency for children - Educational Portfolio To be created for every
child in DFPS conservatorship, to remain a part
of agency records, to enhance educational
outcomes for children in foster care by ensuring
school records follow the child
9Texas Legislative Mandates
- Preparation for Adult Living Improvement in
discharge planning, increase availability of
transitioning planning conference, extend
Medicaid with a single application, enter into
agreements with work force boards that will
benefit foster care youth in the area of
employment - Disproportionality Analysis of removal rates
and other enforcement actions to determine the
existence of disproportionality. DFPS also
required to - Provide cultural competency training to all
service delivery staff - 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. -
10Texas Legislative Mandates
- 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
11Expected Outcomes
- To reduce, and ultimately to prevent, the
disproportionate representation of and disparate
outcomes for African-American children in the
Texas child welfare system, in order to enhance
safety, permanency and well-being for all
children and families
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
15Successful Models Family Focus
- The objective of the Family Focus initiative
- Improve the services delivered to families
receiving Family Based Safety Services and
children, parents and extended family members
involved in the foster care system - Formally integrate a family-focused philosophy
throughout CPS training, policy and contract
processes - Enhance safety, permanency and well being for
children through the provision of direct and
support services to their caregivers whether
biological or through affinity
16Family Group Decision Making (FGDM)
- Expand FGDM statewide for decision-making and
case review for all ongoing services cases and
implement in pre-removal stage of service - Adopt the values and philosophy related to FGDM
and ensure incorporation into all aspects of
program and policy - Incorporate changes in the family assessment and
increase parent participation service planning
processes - Plan for reduction of PPT meetings
- Expand Circles of Support for youth transitioning
out of care
17Kinship Care
- Expand the Kinship Caregiver Program statewide
- Allow parents to identify relatives/fictive kin
for potential placement of children at the time
of removal - Develop informational manual for caregivers
- Improve completion of background and criminal
history checks, home assessments of relatives for
potential placement - Extend resources and support to kinship families
to help meet financial demands
18Education
- Develop and implement educational portfolio
- Ensure education records of children in care
follow them to the next placement - Ensure children are placed in the correct grade
and receive any identified education services for
which they are eligible
19Transitioning Youth Services/Preparation for
Adult Living (PAL)
- Ensure discharge planning to assist young person
in identifying a caring adult (Circles of
Support) - Expand supportive services transition centers,
Texas Work Force - Extend foster care eligibility and transition
services to age 22 - Extend paid foster care to age 21
- Continue Medicaid coverage for young people 18
21 years of age
20Operation PUSH
- Placing Us in Safe Homes (2005) Ensure that
tasks were completed to move children to adoption
finalization - Provide for CPS state office oversight and
monitoring - Promising results show consummation of 3173
adoptions, with increase of 661 adoptions from
previous year
21Operation HOME
- Help On Matching Every Child- Focus attention
on finding adoptive homes for older children who
have a goal of adoption, but are not in permanent
placements - Utilize existing data bases to search for
families who may be a match for a waiting child
or sibling group - Enhance recruitment efforts, improve placement
practices and lessen the time children wait for
an adoptive home
22One Church, One Child
- Contract to increase child specific recruitment
of adoptive parents for African American children
and sibling groups - Recruitment program reaches out to the African
American community and faith communities to
recruit, train and license adoptive families for
children in the Dallas, Houston and Austin areas. - Collaboration will expand efforts to increase the
adoption of African American children between
ages 5 - 15
23CPS Leadership Development
- Ensure leadership readiness to lead internal
cultural change to a family-centered practice
approach - Support CPS leadership through a values-based
development approach - Ensure that leadership development is a core,
ongoing component of initiatives implementation
24Undoing Racism
- Ensure that all CPS leaders are trained in the
principles and operational components of
anti-racist practices - Begin implementation of a plan to train other
levels of staff in undoing racism practices and
principles - Ensure that anti-racist principles are reflected
in CPS vision and values
25Statewide Accomplishments
- San Antonio and 28 surrounding counties
selected as first region to outsource case
management and substitute care services - Austin Region was added as a pilot site for
DFPS to address disproportionality - Grant was received from Amon Carter Foundation
to support disproportionality work in Tarrant
County - All regional directors, program administrators
and all state office directors, division
administrators and some program specialists have
attended Undoing Racism training, along with
various community partners and constituents -
- Family group decision making staff partnering
with disproportionality staff to better
understand the cultural needs of families served
26Statewide Accomplishments
- Disproportionality staff and new FGDM
coordinators are being trained to conduct FGDM
conferences - All youth in foster care over the age of 16
are being offered Circles of Support - As of July 2006, 3,625 FGDM conferences have
been conducted and continue to be offered in 57
counties - Education Portfolios distributed for all
school-aged children in care - Austin region was added as a pilot site for
DFPS to address disproportionality - Over 1,000,000 to assist caregivers in
providing for the essential needs of children in
kinship care
27Challenges and Opportunities
- Challenges
- Public sentiment
- Political will / support
- Practice issues
- Elevating the voice
- Supporting child welfare leadership
- Opportunities
- Strong community engagement
- 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
28Benefits 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 - Improve educational outcomes for foster youth
29The Right Thing to Do
We should dream of and plan for a day when
fewer children require foster care. But until
that day comes, we have a moral responsibility
to prepare young people leaving foster care to
become whole adults who can fulfill their
potential and build bright and promising
futures. -President Jimmy Carter, 2004