Title: A New Vision Of Permanency
1A New Vision Of Permanency
- April 2006
- Jeff Griffin
- Will Ortiz
2 Youth 11-years or Older in PP Service
Component by Placement Facility Type as of Dec.,
1, 2005
Where Are We Now? Agency-Wide
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4Creating Family Connections(Continued)
- A new process of engagement was also taught
regarding how to effectively approach family
members to engage (or re-engage) into the youths
life. The Creating Family Connections pilot
project launched in December 2004 and ended in
June 2005. The 6-month (with one more month of
support by CCS) training project involved 27
youth from the Multi-treatment Transition
Services (MTS) division. The project had
tremendous success in locating and engaging
family members for youth that were previously
thought to have no family members available to
them.
5- Outcomes For Creating Family
- Connections Pilot Project
- Percentage of youth for which possible family
connections - were identified during the CFC project 92
- Percentage of youth for which new family
connections - were achieved during the CFC project 70
-
- Of youth for which connections were
made - Percentage of youth for which the new family
connections that were achieved during the CFC
project have remained since the project ended
88 - Percentage of youth for which there is a positive
difference in the youths functioning now that
more family connections have been achieved 63 - Percentage of youth that have transitioned (or
are being considered for a transition) to a lower
level of care or family as a result of the CFC
project 63 - Percentage of social workers who participated in
the CFC project that think it is valuable and
should be continued 100
6Creating Family Connections
Totals As Of January 2006
7- California Permanency for Youth Project
- Dedicated to assuring that no youth will leave
the California child welfare system without a
permanent lifelong connection to a caring adult - The California Permanency for Youth Project
(CPYP), a project of the Public Health Institute,
started in January 2003 as a result of a
five-year grant awarded by the Stuart Foundation.
This grant has since been extended through 2009.
Other funders include the Walter S. Johnson and
Zellerback Family Foundations. - Children eleven and older in the foster care
system have a poor chance of finding a permanent
family. When they do not find permanency before
they leave the foster care system at age 18,
research shows they often become homeless,
unemployed, and disconnected. We believe it is
the responsibility of the entire community to
make sure that each youth who leaves the foster
care system in California has a permanent
lifelong connection with a caring adult. - Pat Reynolds-Harris, MA, MSPH Director of
California Permanency for Youth Project. - -Taken from the California Permanency For Youth
Website http//www.cpyp.org/
8California Permanency for Youth Project
(CPYP)(continued)
9California Permanency for Youth Project
(CPYP)(continued)
- Definition
- Permanency is both a process and a result that
includes involvement of the youth as a
participant or leader in finding a permanent
connection with at least one committed adult who
provides - A safe, stable and secure parenting relationship
- Love
- Unconditional commitment
- Lifelong support in the context of a legal
arrangement when possible - The opportunity to maintain family ties and
emotional bonds with siblings and important
persons who will sustain connections with their
culture - Simply stated Permanency is when a child and an
adult have a safe, stable, sustainable and
committed relationship across time and
circumstance.
10Orange County CPYP ProjectCPYP Project Goals
- 1. Increase connections for youth
- 2. Increase the number and engagement of
supportive family members to enhance service
provision - 3. Increase the ability of youth to successfully
emancipate from dependency - 4. Expand the success of family finding and
engagement strategies into other areas of CFS and
expand the agencys definition of permanency. - 5. Assess models of family finding and engagement
to determine their usefulness in CFS.
11- Orange County CPYP Project
- What is our target group of youth?
- A total of 45 youth will be involved in the
County of Orange CPYP project - CFC will work with 25 youth in MTS, ICS I, ICS II
- ICS I Senior Social Worker Tawny Crane and
Melanie McCallum will work with 20 selected cases
in ICS I and implement family finding and
engagement strategies for each case with support
of the CPYP committee.
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13Orange County CPYP ProjectWhat is our target
group of youth?(continued)
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17REFERENCES
- Lighting the Fire of Urgency Families Lost and
Found in Americas Child Welfare System. Kevin
Campbell. Catholic Community Services of Western
Washington - Resource Documents, January 2005.
- The National Resource Center for Family-Centered
Practice and Permanency Planning at the Hunter
College School of Social Work http//www.hunter.c
uny.edu/socwork/nrcfcpp/about-us.html - Who Am I? Why Family Really Matters. Barbara
Boisvert, Gina Brimner, Kevin Campbell, Don
Koenig, Mary Stone-Smith. Catholic Community
Services of Western Washington.
www.ccsww.org/preservation/articles/article6.php. - F.A.S.T. Family Assessment and Stabilization
Team. Catholic Community Services of Western
Washington. - www.ccsww.org - California Permanency For Youth Project.
http//www.cpyp.org/ - Permanence for Young People Framework. National
Resource Center for Foster Care and Permanency
Planning at the Hunter College School of Social
Work.