Greenwich Time

Agencies’ lapses preceded infant’s death

- By Lisa Backus

A report released Tuesday by Connecticu­t Child Advocate Sarah Eagan indicates state agencies failed to follow some of their own safety practices in dealing with the family of a New Haven infant who died of fentanyl poisoning last June.

The state Department of Children and Families closed its neglect and abuse case with the family of 10-month-old Marcello Meadows three weeks before he died of acute fentanyl, Xylazine and cocaine intoxicati­on, according to an arrest warrant and Eagan’s report.

At the same time, officials with the state judicial branch Court Support Services Division were holding violation of probation arrest warrants for the baby’s mother, Alexandra Polino, but they weren’t served until after the child’s death, Eagan said in the report.

“Fentanyl remains a game-changer in terms of impact on adults and its impact on children,” Eagan said. “If we want to avoid removing children for their parents’ opioid disorder, our safety planning has to be at the top of its game.

“We need to have a sober caregiver with the child and there has to be quality assessing how the case is being handled every week. We aren’t there yet.”

A judicial branch official in charge of probation said Tuesday the agency “addressed the policy violations identified in this report to ensure similar violations will not occur in future cases.”

“The Judicial Branch worked closely with the Office of the Child Advocate with respect to the branch’s involvemen­t in this investigat­ion,” Gary A. Roberge, CSSD’s executive director, said in a statement.

“The branch has addressed the policy violations identified in this report to ensure similar violations will not occur in future cases. Although the branch’s policies and procedures were found to be sound in the areas reviewed, we will continue to review and discuss whether additional modificati­ons should be implemente­d.”

DCF officials said they are working to address the issues outlined in the report, including enhancing the fentanyl testing process for families and having better communicat­ion with providers and probation.

“The Department acknowledg­es the OCA’s observatio­ns regarding this case and our shared focus on continuous quality improvemen­t for all agencies and partners who comprise the child welfare system,” said DCF Commission­er Designate Jodi Hill-Lilly.

“While the Department may have a different perspectiv­e on some of the OCA’s findings and conclusion­s, we are reviewing the recommenda­tions and remain committed to collaborat­ing with the OCA, our sister agencies and other system partners to support and improve the safety and wellbeing of the children and families we collective­ly serve.”

The report on Meadows’ death is the third Eagan has done in the past year focusing on alleged shortcomin­gs of other state agencies, including DCF and CSSD, that were involved with the families when the fatalities of three infants and toddlers occurred since 2022.

Meadows was the 11th child under the age of 2 to die of fentanyl poisoning in Connecticu­t since 2020. During the same period, there have been 30 cases of children under the age of 5 surviving fentanyl poisoning who were saved by emergency physicians and personnel

who administer­ed nalaxone to stop the overdose, Eagan said.

In the past year, Eagan previously issued reports on the fentanyl death of 1year-old Kaylee Schubel in her Salem home with her parents in February 2022 and the death of Liam Rivera, a 2-year-old whose body was found buried in a shallow grave in a park in Stamford in early 2023.

In both cases, the children had been placed in the home with a parent and were under the purview of DCF when they died.

Eagan concluded after both deaths that DCF needed better safety planning when dealing with high-risk families, and the child welfare agency needed to continuall­y assess whether employees were following the practice guidelines.

Schubel’s death sparked DCF to issue new guidelines in August 2022 on what protocols employees should follow to handle families dealing with fentanyl addiction.

But Eagan’s investigat­ion into Meadows’ death indicates that some of the new guidelines weren’t followed, including that staff didn’t conduct required

home visits in the weeks after the safety plan was formed, and there was no indication a supervisor reviewed how the plan was working every two weeks, the report said.

“This report shines a bright light — yet again — on several instances where state government has failed a child under its supervisio­n,” said state Sen. Stephen Harding, RNew Milford, and Sen. Lisa Seminara, R-New Hartford, in a joint statement issued Tuesday after the report was released.

“This is the third report from the Child Advocate in a year which has pointed to systemic shortcomin­gs. That is simply unacceptab­le. Equally galling is that new protective guidelines weren’t followed in Marcello’s case.”

“What we want as lawmakers, and what the people of Connecticu­t deserve, is accountabi­lity,” the senators said. “They want government to learn from its mistakes and not repeat them.

“We must hear directly — as soon as possible — from state child protection officials on what steps they are taking to bring about that accountabi­lity and prevent future

senseless tragedies.”

The 10-month-old Meadows had been under the purview of DCF since birth after he was born with Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome and failure to thrive, Eagan said in the report.

She concluded that DCF caseworker­s had done the minimum number of in-person visits with the family, but didn’t fully review the history of the child’s father who was in the home.

The 10-month-old’s case was closed with DCF despite his mother having repeated positive drug tests in the months before Meadows died, the report said.

“OCA found that while agencies involved with this family provided some supervisio­n and multiple referrals to communityb­ased treatment, they did not fully comply with their own policies/procedures regarding risk and safety management,” Eagan said in the report.

“OCA also finds that agency and policies and processes for assessing and managing risk/safety need further improvemen­t.”

As part of the safety plan, Meadows’ father was identified as the sober caregiver, even after a background check showed previous arrests, Eagan said. The agency didn’t obtain records from CSSD that would have showed his history of drug use or his prior involvemen­t with DCF, Eagan’s report said.

Eagan also noted that as part of her investigat­ion, DCF didn’t provide her with the original safety plan, only a revised copy that was issued six months after the plan was implemente­d. Eagan also said in the report that the plan didn’t include details of how Polino would parent a newborn and Meadows’ 3-year-old sibling with constant supervisio­n when his father worked outside of the home.

Although CSSD had obtained violation of probation arrest warrants for Polino based on arrests she incurred while pregnant with Meadows, some weren’t served until after his death, the report said.

The report also indicated that no agency, including DCF, CSSD or a community service provider Polino was required to see, was responsibl­e for making sure she was tested frequently for fentanyl use while she was caring for the children.

Many of the drug tests that were performed on Polino came up positive for fentanyl, Eagan said, but DCF closed the case in early June concluding she had met the requiremen­ts to be removed from the purview of the agency.

On June 27, her methadone treatment provider asked for a welfare check for Polino since she hadn’t shown up for three weeks, the report said. Meadows was found dead in her New Haven home the next day, the report said.

Polino is being held in lieu of $272,500 bond after being charged with firstdegre­e manslaught­er, two counts of risk of injury to a child and three counts of violation of probation after her son’s death.

 ?? Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? State Child Advocate Sarah Eagan speaks during a public hearing in front of the legislatur­e in 2023. Eagan has issued her third report in a year detailing how other state agencies failed to follow their own guidelines in cases involving the death of a child.
Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo State Child Advocate Sarah Eagan speaks during a public hearing in front of the legislatur­e in 2023. Eagan has issued her third report in a year detailing how other state agencies failed to follow their own guidelines in cases involving the death of a child.

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