The Gold Coast Bulletin

There must be more ‘care’ in foster care

-

THE door needs to be opened on the foster care system. Stakeholde­rs should be invited to the table for a frank conversati­on about improving it. We are talking about the future of 8800 children in care.

In a report late last year, the Bulletin shone a spotlight on child safety and the debate about how to best protect kids, following a decision to try to reunite a family despite a potsmoking and violent mother having bashed her daughter.

The four-year-old indigenous Gold Coast girl sustained a fractured face and acquired brain injury after being bashed by the 21-yearold mother. The parent was charged but dodged jail.

What emerged was the youngster had been in foster care and “reunited’’ a few months before the assault for unsupervis­ed visits with the mother.

Queensland this week is celebratin­g foster carers, with Child Safety Minister Di Farmer hailing 5300 families as “the backbone of the state’s child safety system”.

How do we strengthen that backbone?

We can give more voice to the carers. The Government is rightly championin­g its success stories, like that of Mudgeeraba couple Mark and Jennifer Justo.

The Coast couple have fostered about 50 children in the past 35 years and now, in their 60s, predict the latest children in their care, two brothers aged 12 and 16, will be their last placements.

They confirm what others inside the system have warned this column – that the biggest change across the decades has been in confrontin­g the challenges of mental health and drugs.

“We’ve had kids with mums who have had some serious mental health issues. We try to do whatever possible to keep the children in touch with their natural families,”

Ms Justo said.

“Even when they don’t, it is important the children stay in contact with as many of their natural family members as possible. But in some cases, particular­ly where mental health is involved, it may not be possible to reconnect with a parent.”

Insiders say the department needs more staff trained in mental health. Foster carers must be given a full health brief, covering sexual and physical abuse, and any concerns about autism or ADHD.

A child safety insider said: “Surely a psychologi­st or psychiatri­st can determine if a child is of a sound mind. Child support officers are just social workers. This is where it falls flat.

“It’s a disaster when kids come through that door of a new home and foster carers are denied informatio­n on their background.”

Labor’s reforms, which include a permanency care order allowing longer stays, are being welcomed. A $2.6 million foster care recruitmen­t campaign is under way.

But everyone agrees that staffing levels, under all government­s, remain an issue. Some officers have a case load of up to 30 kids.

If you are considerin­g foster caring, the fortnightl­y payment is about $484. But you will buy clothes for the kids, be confronted by endless meetings, and accommodat­e the bureaucrac­y, all this beyond the challenge of care. Why do foster carers do it? “It’s compassion for the children, because these poor little children have absolutely no hope,” a carer said.

Ms Justo sees it this way. For the first time, a child can be shown the world of family, beyond chaos and dysfunctio­n.

“I think you, as a carer, shouldn’t be doing it as a job. It’s because you care,” she said.

“Your heart has to be in it. They have to be your kids.

“You have to connect with them like they’re your own.”

 ??  ?? Mental health and drug issues are behind many cases of child abuse.
Mental health and drug issues are behind many cases of child abuse.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia