Boston Herald

CHILD ABUSE RATES IN MASS.,

Reforms haven’t cut child abuse rate

- By MATT STOUT — matthew.stout@bostonhera­ld.com

Children in Massachuse­tts are being abused and neglected at the highest rate in the nation, according to newly released federal data that shows the growing number of victims hasn’t budged in three years despite a series of reforms at the state level.

More than 32,000 Massachuse­tts children were victims of so-called maltreatme­nt in federal fiscal year 2016, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

As a result, the Bay State has a nation-leading rate of 23.3 victims per 1,000 children, more than double the national average. It marked the third straight year Massachuse­tts had the highest rate of abuse and neglect, starting in 2014 — the year before Gov. Charlie Baker took office — when reports jumped by 50 percent in one year alone.

But they’ve stayed steady or even increased since, and at an unmatched pace. In the past five years, no other state has eclipsed a rate of 20 victims per 1,000 kids.

The data, released earlier this month, comes as Baker and the Department of Children and Families have touted a series of reforms since he took office, including pumping an additional $155 million into the budget and adding nearly 600 new staffers to shore up the beleaguere­d agency.

DCF Commission­er Linda Spears, who testified before lawmakers yesterday on Beacon Hill, defended the state’s dubious ranking, saying it has “one of the lowest thresholds” for reporting in the country.

“We receive proportion­ally more reports than other states,” she said while descending a flight of stairs from the hearing, where aides had tried to hustle her from the State House as reporters trailed behind.

“We’ve come a tremendous­ly long way in the last few years,” she said. “We have a lot to build on.”

Aides to Spears later said they attributed the initial spike to “increased public awareness” following a string of high-profile deaths, including the death of Jeremiah Oliver — a Fitchburg boy who went missing in 2013 while under DCF’s watch and was later found dead.

“The public has continued to be vigilant in reporting suspected abuse and neglect to the department,” a DCF spokeswoma­n said.

Other state data show improvemen­ts could be coming. The Office of the Child Advocate, a statelevel watchdog, released data yesterday showing the number of allegation­s of abuse and neglect in socalled out-of-home settings — including foster care — dropped by about 21 percent last year, to 655.

The report, however, was a mixed bag: 40 children in state care of custody died last fiscal year, a jump from 35 in 2016. That included one child that was 3 years old or younger who died of physical abuse, and 18 others who died of a sudden or unexpected death, many of which included accidental suffocatio­n in a bed.

“For me, the better measure is the substantia­ted reports of abuse and neglect, particular­ly for the children the commonweal­th is responsibl­e for,” Maria Mossaides, director of the Office of the Child Advocate said. “You don’t have controls over incidents happening, necessaril­y.”

 ??  ?? AWARENESS CITED: Spears testifies before Rep. Kay Khan, left, co-chairwoman of the Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabiliti­es at yesterday’s hearing, above.
AWARENESS CITED: Spears testifies before Rep. Kay Khan, left, co-chairwoman of the Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabiliti­es at yesterday’s hearing, above.
 ??  ??
 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY PATRICK WHITTEMORE ?? ‘A LOT TO BUILD ON’: DCF Commission­er Linda Spears, seen testifying yesterday on Beacon Hill, says low reporting thresholds factor into the state’s child abuse rate.
STAFF PHOTOS BY PATRICK WHITTEMORE ‘A LOT TO BUILD ON’: DCF Commission­er Linda Spears, seen testifying yesterday on Beacon Hill, says low reporting thresholds factor into the state’s child abuse rate.

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